
prepositions - Suffer from or suffer with? - English Language …
2020年8月24日 · I suffer with my friend. This means that you and your friend are suffering together. You are suffering and they are suffering. The cause of the suffering is not stated—perhaps you are both suffering from food poisoning. Returning to the original question, the same analysis can be be applied if we use fatigue, for example: I suffer from fatigue.
word choice - "Suffer" vs. "suffer from" - English Language
2013年9月25日 · So “suffer” by itself can also mean allow. The Oxford Dictionary on-line has: archaic Tolerate. ‘France will no longer suffer the existing government’ But I’m not sure about it being ‘archaic’ as it also has the living example in the phrase: ‘he was a perfectionist who didn’t suffer fools gladly’
What is the difference between "suffer for" and "suffer from"?
2021年5月6日 · Suffer for The OED has examples of this under meaning "3 a. To undergo or submit to pain, punishment, or death." Examples it gives include "Every Man is obliged to suffer for what is right, as to oppose what is Unjust." "It was a hard thing to suffer for an opinion; but there are times when opinions are as dangerous as acts."
meaning - It suffered me a lot or it made me suffer a lot? - English ...
2020年8月29日 · The broken leg made me suffer a lot./ The broken leg caused me to suffer a lot / “The broken leg was the cause of my suffering a lot.” To suffer is incapable of meaning “to cause to suffer. Intransitive. “I suffered from a rare illness.” Here, “to suffer” = to experience or to undergo, with pain or inconvenience.
word usage - Can I say that people "suffer the famine"? - English ...
2014年12月23日 · CarSmack/Maulik, we are referring to a prevailing situation from which people are continuously or regularly suffering. So it's correct to say "most of the people who live in Ghana suffer from famine. I think you need to be careful when you downvote. "Some parts of the world suffer regularly from famine (The Free Dictionary). –
A word for "wanting everyone else to suffer the same as you"?
2020年6月15日 · It seems like your professor just believes that working for the answers will help you learn them better, not that he wants everyone to suffer as he did. Were it the latter, I'd call it "spite," which seems to be your question- but I don't have a word for what I …
Phrase with similar meaning to "don't suffer fools gladly/lightly"
2018年7月12日 · I am looking for a phrase that is similar to "he doesn't suffer fools gladly" it is something like "he'd sooner walk through you, than around" likely UK/Irish in origin. I read it in an Irish paper a few years ago to describe someone who was impatient w people and didn't suffer fools lightly. I cannot remember the exact phrase though.
Can we use ''suffer'' in passive form? - English Language Learners ...
2016年1月26日 · In one of its archaic meanings, "to allow", yes, you can: The physician was suffered to enter the queen's privy chamber.
word choice - "suffer" and "lack" can be used together? - English ...
2011年3月3日 · Suffer and lack can most certainly be used together. Thus, your example is correct: The assets suffer from a lack of reliability. Suffer goes well directly with negative nouns; some common phrases (mostly literary) are: suffer loss • suffer want • suffer defeat • suffer depression • suffer pain • suffer shame • suffer neglect
suffer vs suffer from? | UsingEnglish.com ESL Forum
2010年12月27日 · This is the definition about suffer vs suffer from in a grammar book, but in the dictionary, "suffer from" is for "diseases, pain, sorrow,etc" while "suffer" is for "injury, loss, defeat". Which is true? 1.He suffered a lot of pain.- When body or mind directly feels the pain. 2.He suffered from headaches. -When you are badly affected by ...