Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective Experiencing malaise.

Etymologies

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From malaise +‎ -ed.

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Examples

  • She is feverish – which happens – and limp-limbed and quiet and malaised – which never, ever happens, not with her.

    Bad Friday | Her Bad Mother 2008

  • She is feverish - which happens - and limp-limbed and quiet and malaised - which never, ever happens, not with her.

    Archive 2008-03-02 2008

  • She is feverish - which happens - and limp-limbed and quiet and malaised - which never, ever happens, not with her.

    Bad Friday 2008

  • French intellectuals will remain amazed, frustrated, malaised.

    Where Are You Now Charles De Gaulle? 2007

  • No-one in this PC malaised-country openly had the guts to state out-loud the bleeding obvious

    Planet Atheism Canterbury Atheists 2010

  • No-one in this PC malaised-country openly had the guts to state out-loud the bleeding obvious

    Planet Atheism Canterbury Atheists 2010

  • But we were supposed to be celebrating the centennial of UNC basketball this year, and it feels a little like America's bicentennial: an epic calendar event that happened to fall in the year 1976, when the entire country was malaised, depressed, stuck in gas lines and wearing checkered polyester leisure suits.

    xtcian Ian Williams 2010

  • No-one in this PC malaised-country openly had the guts to state out-loud the bleeding obvious

    Planet Atheism Canterbury Atheists 2010

  • No-one in this PC malaised-country openly had the guts to state out-loud the bleeding obvious

    Planet Atheism Canterbury Atheists 2010

  • Today, Carter is caricatured as a weak-kneed, sweater-wearing puritan who struggled with lust in his heart, presided over a malaised America, and micromanaged even the scheduling of the White House tennis courts.

    Latest Articles 2009

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