Use "with difficulty" in a sentence

1. I restrained tears with difficulty.

2. The situation was fraught with difficulty.

3. These things can be arranged with difficulty.

4. He was pushing a handtruck with difficulty.

5. Blowing: to breathe hard, quickly, or with difficulty.

6. Blows: to breathe hard, quickly, or with difficulty.

7. I obtained this record for you with difficulty.

8. Blow: to breathe hard, quickly, or with difficulty.

9. The detective-constable picked out the words with difficulty.

10. The mountain track is negotiable, but only with difficulty.

11. Choosing a Tessa-only provider is fraught with difficulty.

12. 17 The old lady climbed up the stairs with difficulty.

13. The expedition through the jungle was fraught with difficulty and danger.

14. 4 The old lady can mount the stairs only with difficulty.

15. Bridges are often accessible only with difficulty at statically sensitive points.

16. World economics'disease on first cannot convalesce, China's sneeze also with difficulty stops.

17. She restrained herself with difficulty from showing a quaver in her voice.

18. Beholders prefer inaccessible locations that earthbound foes can reach only with difficulty.

19. The Dynarex Oxygen Concentrator supplies additional oxygen to individuals with difficulty breathing

20. The crystalline lens loses its flexibility, bulging insufficiently, and adapts with difficulty.

21. The paralysis affects his right leg and he can only walk with difficulty.

22. Only by coming to grips with difficulty can you realize your full potential.

23. Bulbar weakness is often associated with difficulty in chewing, weakness of the facial muscles

24. Furthermore, glass-filled nylon is a highly abrasive moulding material that flows only with difficulty.

25. Chug definition: When a vehicle Chugs somewhere , it goes there slowly, noisily and with difficulty

26. : to say (something) with difficulty because of strong emotion She tearfully Choked out an apology

27. With difficulty, he made his way towards her, Charlotte clinging to him for dear life.

28. Breathtaking definition is - causing one to breathe rapidly or with difficulty : making one out of breath

29. And he kept taking wheels off their chariots so that they were driving them with difficulty.”

30. I only can face with a piece of paper alone, with difficulty and a brown study.

31. Breathless definition, without breath or breathing with difficulty; gasping; panting: We were Breathless after the steep climb

32. Breathless definition, without breath or breathing with difficulty; gasping; panting: We were Breathless after the steep climb

33. And he kept taking wheels off their chariots so that they were driving them with difficulty.” —Ex.

34. (adjective) Karay, his hair Bristling, and probably bruised or wounded, climbed with difficulty out of the gully.

35. Just when that outcome seems certain, soldiers appear and with difficulty snatch the victim from the violent crowd.

36. In such cases,finding a market for a new product is less problematic, but may still Befraught with difficulty

37. He got out of his car with difficulty, one elephantine foot first, then the bulk of his enormous body.

38. She got it shut, and leaning with difficulty to the jolting bowl, she vomited colourless fluids from her empty stomach.

39. 22 She got it shut, and leaning with difficulty to the jolting bowl, she vomited colourless fluids from her empty stomach.

40. When the pursuers entered the seabed, Jehovah “kept taking wheels off their chariots so that they were driving them with difficulty.”

41. The chloride of this oxidation state is formed only with difficulty and decomposes readily into lead(II) chloride and chlorine gas.

42. / ˈklæm.bɚ / to climb up, across, or into somewhere with difficulty, using the hands and the feet: They Clambered over/up the rocks

43. / ˈklæm.bɚ / to climb up, across, or into somewhere with difficulty, using the hands and the feet: They Clambered over/up the rocks

44. Bookmobile The JCPL traveling library visits community residences throughout the county to bring library materials and services to those with difficulty accessing a library location

45. / ˈklæm.bə r/ to climb up, across, or into somewhere with difficulty, using the hands and the feet: They Clambered over/up the rocks

46. A Coughing spasm is a prolonged Coughing, which usually lasts more than five minutes, and may be accompanied with difficulty breathing and difficulty talking, states Healthgrades

47. The length of downhill tracks is 950 m, they are suitable for beginners as well as advanced skiers with difficulty of blue and red ski slope.

48. crawl verb (MOVE) B2 [ I ] to move slowly or with difficulty, especially with your body stretched out along the ground or on hands and knees: The child Crawled across the floor.

49. THE GEOGRAPHY OF STRABO, VOLUME III (OF 3) STRABO One of the tenders was taken, with its Armament and seven seamen; the rest were with difficulty towed out of the creek

50. The position of the candelabrum displeased me, and outreaching my hand with difficulty, rather than disturb my slumbering valet, I placed it so as to throw its rays more fully upon the book.

51. The classification of the individual heron/egret species is fraught with difficulty, and no clear consensus exists about the correct placement of many species into either of the two major genera, Ardea and Egretta.

52. Republicans nominated, had voted in Congress for the free coinage of silver, was widely known as a Bimetallist, and was only with difficulty persuaded to accept the unequivocal indorsement of the gold standard which was pressed upon him by his counselors.

53. But evidently adverse winds, probably from the NW, forced the mariners to take a southerly course from Cnidus to Crete and then sail under the shelter of the island’s S coast, finally reaching Fair Havens with difficulty. —Ac 27:5-8.

54. Clamber (v.) "to climb with difficulty using hands and feet," late 14c., possibly frequentative of Middle English climben "to climb" (past tense clamb), or akin to Old Norse klembra "to hook (oneself) on." Related: Clambered; clambering.

55. Circuitously Sentence Examples Moreover, the largest streams have numerous tributaries, and nearly all alike flow Circuitously between steep if not vertical cliffs or in deep craggy ravines overlooked by distant hills, among which the wagon road has wound its way with difficulty.

56. It came to my attention, that in the remote forests of Kerala where there is no path to tread upon and only after walking an entire day, some villages can be reached with difficulty; a tribal village panchayat named Idmalakudi is there.

57. Asphyxiating - tending to deprive of oxygen; "Asphyxiating gasses" breathless , dyspneal , dyspneic , dyspnoeal , dyspnoeic - not breathing or able to breathe except with difficulty; "breathless at thought of what I had done"; "breathless from running"; "followed the match with breathless interest"

58. Ayeinst this horrible Synne of Accidie / and Þe brauches of the same / there is a vertu Þat is called ffortitudo or Strength / Þat is an affection / Þurgh for which a man espiseth Annoyous Þynges troublesome, challenging, annoying troubled; beset with difficulty; Usage notes

59. 1986, John le Carré, A Perfect Spy: They are crossing the carpark with difficulty for Rick is holding Pym's arm in an Ambulant bearhug and they are advancing at an angle like a pair of crookedly hung overcoats.· Designed for use by somebody with a disability that impairs, but does not prevent, walking

60. The invention concerns moisture-proof, thermoplastic, environmentally friendly, thermoplastically produced products and cast films of processable starch materials consisting of starchy fat acyl compounds obtainable from amylose-rich starches which dissolve with difficulty in water and softeners which, like citric acid ethyl ester, glycerin acetate and lactic acid ester, have a gelling effect and preferably have solution properties causing a brilliant transparency and are demonstrably bio-degradable.

61. Lastly, although it is firmly established that damage of a pecuniary nature cannot, save in exceptional circumstances, be regarded as irreparable, or even as being reparable only with difficulty, if it can ultimately be the subject of financial compensation, it is also settled case-law that an interim measure is justified if it appears that, without that measure, the applicant would find itself in a position which could jeopardise its existence before final judgment in the main action or irremediably alter its position in the market.