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Synonyms of the word 
TORMENT → AFFLICTION - AGONY - ANGUISH - ANNOYANCE - BADGERING - BEDEVIL - BEDEVILMENT - BESET - CHAFE - CHEVY - CHIVVY - CHIVY - CRUCIFY - CURSE - DISTRESS - DUN - EXCRUCIATE - FRUSTRATE - HARASS - HARASSMENT - HARRY - HASSLE - HURT - HURTING - INJURE - MOLEST - MOLESTATION - PAIN - PLAGUE - PROVOKE - RACK - RAG - SUFFERING - TORTURE - VEXATION - WORRYING - WOUNDtorment- n. (obsolete) A catapult or other kind of war-engine.
- n. Torture, originally as inflicted by an instrument of torture.
- n. Any extreme pain, anguish or misery, either physical or mental.
- v. (transitive) To cause severe suffering to (stronger than to vex but weaker than to torture.).
affliction- n. A state of pain, suffering, distress or agony.
- n. Something which causes pain, suffering, distress or agony.
agony- n. Violent contest or striving.
- n. Pain so extreme as to cause writhing or contortions of the body, similar to those made in the athletic…
- n. Paroxysm of joy; keen emotion.
- n. The last struggle of life; death struggle.
anguish- n. Extreme pain, either of body or mind; excruciating distress.
- v. (intransitive) To suffer pain.
- v. (transitive) To cause to suffer pain.
annoyance- n. (countable) That which annoys.
- n. (countable) An act or instance of annoying.
- n. (uncountable) The psychological state of being annoyed or irritated.
badgering- v. present participle of badger.
- n. The act of one who badgers, pesters, or annoys.
bedevil- v. To harass or cause trouble for; to plague.
- v. To perplex or bewilder.
bedevilment- n. The characteristic of being bedeviled.
beset- v. (transitive) To surround or hem in.
- v. (transitive) To attack, especially from all sides.
- v. (transitive) To decorate something with jewels etc.
- v. (nautical) Of a ship, to get trapped by ice.
chafe- n. Heat excited by friction.
- n. Injury or wear caused by friction.
- n. Vexation; irritation of mind; rage.
- n. (archaic) An expression of opinionated conflict.
- v. (transitive) To excite heat in by friction; to rub in order to stimulate and make warm.
- v. (transitive) To excite passion or anger in; to fret; to irritate.
- v. (transitive) To fret and wear by rubbing.
- v. (intransitive) To rub; to come together so as to wear by rubbing; to wear by friction.
- v. (intransitive) To be worn by rubbing.
- v. (intransitive) To have a feeling of vexation; to be vexed; to fret; to be irritated.
chevy- n. A hunt or pursuit.
- n. A cry used in hunting.
- n. The game of prisoners' bars.
- v. to hunt or chase.
chivvy- v. To subject to harassment or verbal abuse.
- v. To coerce, as by persistent request.
- v. To sneak up on or rapidly approach.
- v. To pursue as in a hunt.
- n. A goad.
chivy- n. A hunt or chase.
- n. A hunting cry.
- v. (transitive) To vex or harass with petty attacks.
- v. (transitive) To maneuver or secure gradually.
- v. (intransitive) To scurry.
crucify- v. To execute (a person) by nailing to a cross.
- v. To punish or otherwise express extreme anger at, especially as a scapegoat or target of outrage.
- v. (informal) To thoroughly beat at a sport or game.
curse- n. A supernatural detriment or hindrance; a bane.
- n. A prayer or imprecation that harm may befall someone.
- n. The cause of great harm, evil, or misfortune; that which brings evil or severe affliction; torment.
- n. A vulgar epithet.
- n. (slang) A woman's menses.
- v. (transitive) To place a curse upon (a person or object).
- v. To call upon divine or supernatural power to send injury upon; to imprecate evil upon; to execrate.
- v. (transitive) To speak or shout a vulgar curse or epithet.
- v. (intransitive) To use offensive or morally inappropriate language.
- v. To bring great evil upon; to be the cause of serious harm or unhappiness to; to furnish with that which…
distress- n. (Cause of) discomfort.
- n. Serious danger.
- n. (law) A seizing of property without legal process to force payment of a debt.
- n. (law) The thing taken by distraining; that which is seized to procure satisfaction.
- v. To cause strain or anxiety to someone.
- v. (law) To retain someone’s property against the payment of a debt; to distrain.
- v. To treat an object, such as an antique, to give it an appearance of age.
dun- n. A brownish grey colour.
- adj. Of a brownish grey colour.
- n. (countable) A collector of debts.
- n. An urgent request or demand of payment.
- v. (transitive) To ask or beset a debtor for payment.
- v. (transitive) To harass by continually repeating e.g. a request.
- n. (countable) A newly hatched, immature mayfly; a mayfly subimago.
- n. (countable, fishing) A fly made to resemble the mayfly subimago.
- n. An ancient or medieval fortification; especially a hill-fort in Scotland or Ireland.
- n. (archeology) A structure in the Orkney or Shetland islands or in Scotland consisting of a roundhouse surrounded…
- v. (nonstandard, informal) Eye dialect spelling of done: past participle of do.
- v. (nonstandard, informal) Eye dialect spelling of don't: Contraction of do + not.
- v. (transitive, dated) To cure, as codfish, by laying them, after salting, in a pile in a dark place, covered…
- n. A mound or small hill.
- interj. (humorous) Imitating suspenseful music.
excruciate- v. (transitive) To inflict intense pain or mental distress on (someone); to torture.
- adj. (obsolete) Excruciated; tortured.
frustrate- v. (transitive) To disappoint or defeat; to vex by depriving of something expected or desired.
- v. (transitive) To hinder or thwart.
- v. (transitive) To cause stress or panic.
- adj. vain; ineffectual; useless; nugatory.
harass- v. To fatigue or to tire with repeated and exhausting efforts.
- v. To annoy endlessly or systematically; to molest.
- v. To put excessive burdens upon; to subject to anxieties.
- n. (obsolete) devastation; waste.
- n. (obsolete) worry; harassment.
harassment- n. Persistent attacks and criticism causing worry and distress.
- n. Deliberate pestering or annoying.
- n. Excessive intimidation.
harry- v. (transitive) To harass, stress, badger, bother; to distress, trouble, or tire with demands, threats, or…
- v. To strip; to lay waste.
hassle- n. Trouble, bother, unwanted annoyances or problems.
- n. A fight or argument.
- n. An action which is not worth the difficulty involved.
- v. To trouble, to bother, to annoy.
- v. To pick a fight or start an argument.
hurt- v. (intransitive) To be painful.
- v. (transitive) To cause (a creature) physical pain and/or injury.
- v. (transitive) To cause (somebody) emotional pain.
- v. (transitive) To undermine, impede, or damage.
- adj. Wounded, physically injured.
- adj. Pained.
- n. An emotional or psychological hurt (humiliation or bad experience).
- n. (archaic) A bodily injury causing pain; a wound or bruise.
- n. (archaic) injury; damage; detriment; harm.
- n. (heraldry) A roundel azure (blue circular spot).
- n. (engineering) A band on a trip-hammer helve, bearing the trunnions.
- n. A husk.
hurting- v. present participle of hurt.
- n. A sensation that hurts.
injure- v. (transitive) To wound or cause physical harm to a living creature.
- v. (transitive) To damage or impair.
- v. (transitive) To do injustice to.
molest- v. To annoy intentionally.
- v. To disturb or tamper with.
- v. To sexually abuse, especially a minor.
molestationpain- n. (countable and uncountable) An ache or bodily suffering, or an instance of this; an unpleasant sensation,…
- n. (uncountable) The condition or fact of suffering or anguish especially mental, as opposed to pleasure;…
- n. (countable) An annoying person or thing.
- n. (uncountable, obsolete) Suffering inflicted as punishment or penalty.
- n. Labour; effort; pains.
- v. (transitive) To hurt; to put to bodily uneasiness or anguish; to afflict with uneasy sensations of any…
- v. (transitive) To render uneasy in mind; to disquiet; to distress; to grieve.
- v. (transitive, obsolete) To inflict suffering upon as a penalty; to punish.
plague- n. (often used with the, sometimes capitalized: the Plague) The bubonic plague, the pestilent disease caused…
- n. (pathology) An epidemic or pandemic caused by any pestilence, but specifically by the above disease.
- n. A widespread affliction, calamity or destructive influx, especially when seen as divine retribution.
- n. A grave nuisance, whatever greatly irritates.
- v. (transitive) To harass, pester or annoy someone persistently or incessantly.
- v. (transitive) To afflict with a disease or other calamity.
provoke- v. (transitive) To cause someone to become annoyed or angry.
- v. (transitive) To bring about a reaction.
- v. (obsolete) To appeal.
rack- n. A series of one or more shelves, stacked one above the other.
- n. Any of various kinds of frame for holding clothes, bottles, animal fodder, mined ore, shot on a vessel,…
- n. (nautical) A piece or frame of wood, having several sheaves, through which the running rigging passes.
- n. A distaff.
- n. A bar with teeth on its face or edge, to work with those of a gearwheel, pinion, or worm, which is to…
- n. A bar with teeth on its face or edge, to work with a pawl as a ratchet allowing movement in one direction…
- n. A device, incorporating a ratchet, used to torture victims by stretching them beyond their natural limits.
- n. A cranequin, a mechanism including a rack, pinion and pawl, providing both mechanical advantage and a…
- n. A set of antlers (as on deer, moose or elk).
- n. A cut of meat involving several adjacent ribs.
- n. (billiards, snooker, pool) A hollow triangle used for aligning the balls at the start of a game.
- n. (slang, vulgar) A woman's breasts.
- n. (climbing, caving) A friction device for abseiling, consisting of a frame with five or more metal bars,…
- n. (climbing, slang) A climber's set of equipment for setting up protection and belays, consisting of runners,…
- n. A grate on which bacon is laid.
- n. (obsolete) That which is extorted; exaction.
- n. (algebra) A set with a distributive binary operation whose result is unique.
- v. To place in or hang on a rack.
- v. To torture (someone) on the rack.
- v. To cause (someone) to suffer pain.
- v. (figuratively) To stretch or strain; to harass, or oppress by extortion.
- v. (billiards, snooker, pool) To put the balls into the triangular rack and set them in place on the table.
- v. (slang) To strike a male in the groin with the knee.
- v. To (manually) load (a round of ammunition) from the magazine or belt into firing position in an automatic…
- v. (mining) To wash (metals, ore, etc.) on a rack.
- v. (nautical) To bind together, as two ropes, with cross turns of yarn, marline, etc.
- v. To move the slide bar on a shotgun in order to chamber the next round.
- v. To stretch a person's joints.
- v. To drive; move; go forward rapidly; stir.
- v. To fly, as vapour or broken clouds.
- n. Thin, flying, broken clouds, or any portion of floating vapour in the sky.
- v. (brewing) To clarify, and thereby deter further fermentation of, beer, wine or cider by draining or siphoning…
- v. (of a horse) To amble fast, causing a rocking or swaying motion of the body; to pace.
- n. A fast amble.
- n. (obsolete) A wreck; destruction.
rag- n. (in the plural) Tattered clothes.
- n. A piece of old cloth; a tattered piece of cloth; a shred, a tatter.
- n. A shabby, beggarly fellow; a ragamuffin.
- n. A ragged edge in metalworking.
- n. (nautical, slang) A sail, or any piece of canvas.
- n. (slang, pejorative) A newspaper, magazine.
- n. (poker) A poor, low-ranking kicker.
- v. (intransitive) To become tattered.
- n. A coarse kind of rock, somewhat cellular in texture; ragstone.
- v. To break (ore) into lumps for sorting.
- v. To cut or dress roughly, as a grindstone.
- v. To scold or rail at; to rate; to tease; to torment; to banter.
- v. (Britain slang) To drive a car or another vehicle in a hard, fast or unsympathetic manner.
- v. To tease or torment, especially at a university; to bully, to haze.
- v. (music, obsolete) To add syncopation (to a tune) and thereby make it appropriate for a ragtime song.
- n. (dated) A prank or practical joke.
- n. (Britain, Ireland) A society run by university students for the purpose of charitable fundraising.
- n. (obsolete, US) An informal dance party featuring music played by African-American string bands.
- n. A ragtime song, dance or piece of music.
- v. (transitive, informal) To play or compose (a piece, melody, etc.) in syncopated time.
- v. (intransitive, informal) To dance to ragtime music.
suffering- adj. Experiencing pain.
- n. The condition of someone who suffers; a state of pain or distress.
- v. present participle of suffer.
torture- n. Intentional causing of somebody's experiencing agony.
- n. (chiefly literary) The "suffering of the heart" imposed by one on another, as in personal relationships.
- n. (colloquial) (often as "absolute torture") stage fright, severe embarrassment.
- v. (transitive) To intentionally inflict severe pain or suffering on (someone).
vexation- n. The act of annoying, vexing, or irritating.
- n. The state of being vexed or irritated.
worrying- adj. Inducing worry.
- v. present participle of worry.
- n. The act of worrying or harassing somebody.
wound- n. An injury, such as a cut, stab, or tear, to a (usually external) part of the body.
- n. (figuratively) A hurt to a person's feelings, reputation, prospects, etc.
- n. (criminal law) An injury to a person by which the skin is divided or its continuity broken.
- v. (transitive) To hurt or injure (someone) by cutting, piercing, or tearing the skin.
- v. (transitive) To hurt (a person's feelings).
- v. simple past tense and past participle of wind.
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