strainful

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From strain +‎ -ful.

Adjective[edit]

strainful (comparative more strainful, superlative most strainful)

  1. Full of strain; requiring or exacting great effort; strenuous; stressful.
    • 1986, Jerome Seymour Bruner, Jacqueline J. Goodnow, George A. Austin, A Study of Thinking:
      The general conclusion we wish to draw is a simple one. Certain strategies are less strainful than others in terms of the demands they place on memory and upon inference.
    • 2002, Suzette Cote, Criminological theories:
      In developing inventories of strainful events, criminologists must keep in mind the fact that there may be important []
    • 2004, Hamid R. Nemati, Christopher D. Barko, Organizational data mining:
      The first type of coping response changes the situation out of which the strainful experience arises.

Anagrams[edit]