
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 …
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 …
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 …
conjunctions - Suffered from vs suffered - English Language
2013年10月26日 · If you use suffer with a direct object, you are generally referring to a single negative experience. For example: She suffered a heart attack on her 80th birthday. The …
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 …
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 …
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 …
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 …
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, …