stress
/stɹɛs/
stress
English
Noun Top 2,999
American (Amy)
(medium)
Female
0.7s
American (Ryan)
(medium)
Male
0.5s
American (Lessac)
(medium)
Female
0.8s
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Definition
A physical, chemical, infective agent aggressing an organism.
Etymology
From a shortening of Middle English destresse, borrowed from Old French destrecier, from Latin distringō (“to stretch out”). This form probably coalesced with Middle English stresse, from Old French estrece (“narrowness”), from Vulgar Latin *strictia, from Latin strictus (“narrow”). In the sense of "mental strain" or “disruption”, used occasionally in the 1920s and 1930s by psychologists, including Walter Cannon (1934); in “biological threat”, used by endocrinologist Hans Selye, by metaphor with stress in physics (force on an object) in the 1930s, and popularized by same in the 1950s.
Example Sentences
- "Go easy on him, he's been under a lot of stress lately."
- "Lazarus and Folkman’s transactional model of stress and coping describes psychological stress as “a particular relationship between the person and the environment that is appraised as taxing or exceeding his or her resources and endangering his or her well-being” (Lazarus & Folkman, 1984, p.19). According to these authors, the essence of inducing stress is how a person appraises the situation and whether he or she has the physical and mental ability to cope with the problem."
- "Some people put the stress on the first syllable of “controversy”; others put it on the second."
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