being hurt in English

being injured, being wounded, being insulted, being offended

Use "being hurt" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "being hurt" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "being hurt", or refer to the context using the word "being hurt" in the English Dictionary.

1. You're being hurt more than anyone.

2. I'm starting to think you enjoy being hurt.

3. 5 Landlocked Uganda and Rwanda are being hurt.

4. Mr. Rochester : Well , endure my surliness without being hurt .

5. 9 Not all companies are being hurt by the slowdown.

6. However, I had learned to guard my feelings because I was afraid of being hurt emotionally.

7. 2 The ozone layer surrounding the earth protects our skin from being hurt by the ultraviolet rays.

8. 20 The ozone layer surrounding the earth protects our skin from being hurt by the ultraviolet rays.

9. And since you think the cohesiveness of our division is being hurt, then one of you absolutely must go

10. The fighter could not help flinching from the blow aimed by his opponent,but it saved him from being hurt.

11. As far as Botheration currently goes, Mr Banker rates about a 2 and the latest reactionary strike against equality, and actual lives being hurt, a 95

12. Caution: Be sure not to forcedly tread kick starter to avoid your foot and the engine being hurt by the returning of the suppressed kick starter.

13. (disapproving) behaving in a way that secretly hurts others or deliberately fails to prevent others from being hurt He plays a power-hungry, Conniving politician in the new Wednesday-night drama

14. For instance, a person may adopt a Cynical attitude as a mechanism of self-defense, that is, as a means to go by daily affairs without being hurt or negatively affected (from an …

15. DAughter lets us know that a lot of people have truly been hurt and just give up, so if you’re still going, even after being hurt, you’re lucky! The theme of self-destruction is evident.

16. "one who lacks courage to meet danger or shrinks from the chance of being hurt," mid-13c., from Anglo-French couard, couart, Old French coart "Coward" (no longer the usual word in French, which has now in this sense poltron, from Italian, and lâche), from coe "tail," from Latin coda, popular dialect variant of cauda "tail" (see coda) + -ard, an agent noun suffix denoting one that