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A situation from which extrication is difficult especially an unpleasant or trying one
Answer for the clue "A situation from which extrication is difficult especially an unpleasant or trying one ", 6 letters:
plight
Alternative clues for the word plight
Word definitions for plight in dictionaries
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
Etymology 1 n. A dire or unfortunate situation. (from 14th c.) Etymology 2 n. 1 (context now chiefly dialectal English) responsibility for ensuing consequences; risk; danger; peril. 2 (context now chiefly dialectal English) An instance of danger or peril; ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"condition or state (usually bad)," late 12c., "danger, harm, strife," from Anglo-French plit , pleit , Old French pleit , ploit "condition" (13c.), originally "way of folding," from Vulgar Latin *plictum , from Latin plicitum , neuter past participle of ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Plight \Plight\, obs. imp. & p. p. of Pluck . --Chaucer.
Usage examples of plight.
It was useless to take them to task, to inform them that this behaviour instead of easing their plight only brought out the worst in their superiors and made them the butt of every perceived mistake aboard ship.
But the apocryphal fable is nonetheless eloquent testimony to the gathering suspicion and hatred directed at the court, which, along with officials in Paris, was held responsible for the plight of the common people.
If Davies were once to know his good name had been attacked, and that his explanation of his failure to reach his men or give notice of their plight had been aspersed, somebody might put him up to demanding a court of inquiry.
By nightfall the enemy were in a desperate plight, with a confused mass of vehicles almost twenty miles in length, blocked in front and attacked in flank.
Until the spirit of the new era reached the Rationing Board and moved them to reconsider the plight of such as Boa, it would not be possible to return her to the dismal wards of the First National Flightpaths annex.
He was a young man and a profligate, and had got into a house of illfame, from which he came out in sorry plight.
Might find thee in some amber clime, Where sunlight dazzles on the sail, And dreaming of our plighted vale Might seal the dream, and bless the time, With maiden kisses three.
This room has been the scene of the happiest hours of my life in which my coeternal companion, incased in the flesh of a real man, plighted his everlasting love and devotion to me.
Had Corbeau received less than the usual indulgent understanding from his fellows and superiors that a young officer in such a plight might ordinarily expect?
Putting up with a doltish cousin and penurious foster parents for a few years scarcely seems the Cinderella-ish plight Rowling intends it to appear, considering the Oxford of wizard schools is waiting to bring Harry into the fold.
Latin gentleman of wealth and position who had taken for his own the plight of the favela poor and the landless peasants.
What it has taken minutes to write occurred in but a few seconds, but during that time Tars Tarkas had seen my plight and had dropped from the lower branches, which he had reached with such infinite labour, and as I flung the last of my immediate antagonists from me the great Thark leaped to my side, and again we fought, back to back, as we had done a hundred times before.
Despite his show of gruffness, he too was moved by the plight of the children.
Roman The idea of the sorry plight in which I had left the Marquis de Prie, his mistress, and perhaps all the company, who had undoubtedly coveted the contents of my cash-box, amused me till I reached Chamberi, where I only stopped to change horses.
My readers will remember that I had been on the point of marrying Therese, and this circumstance made me ashamed of presenting myself to her in such a sorry plight.