Definition of Unrelieved. Meaning of Unrelieved. Synonyms of Unrelieved

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Unrelieved. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Unrelieved and, of course, Unrelieved synonyms and on the right images related to the word Unrelieved.

Definition of Unrelieved

No result for Unrelieved. Showing similar results...

Meaning of Unrelieved from wikipedia

- and humiliating people and kept even close ****ociates in a state of "unrelieved fear". Service suggested he had tendencies toward a paranoid and sociopathic...
- secure; they resorted to campfire cooking and bathing in cold streams. The unrelieved, round-the-clock proximity of five people in one car gave rise to vicious...
- incapable of informing others of their pain. Beyond the issue of humane care, unrelieved pain has functional implications. Persistent pain can lead to decreased...
- find a successful mean between the opposite extremes of unrelieved repetition and unrelieved alteration." Examples of common forms of Western music include...
- unreservedly against the publication of this book which is gloom and horror unrelieved. One feels that what is at the bottom of his fierceness is not nearly...
- prevalent throughout these western regions, where bleak desolation is unrelieved by any vegetation bigger than a low bush, and where the wind sweeps unchecked...
- emergency repairs. Despite the strain of constant alerts and long periods of unrelieved action, she sent out her planes to cover our landing operations and land...
- "by a comedian as a repulsive clown or, alternatively, as a monster of unrelieved evil." Kean's Shylock established his re****tion as an actor. From Kean's...
- Glastonbury Festival in 1924. Feeling that Hardy's play offered too much-unrelieved grimness, Broughton received permission to import a handful of lyrics...
- unshakeable sense of one's inevitable and imminent personal demise or states of unrelieved terror that they believe will persist after the substance's effects have...