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Etymology of the English word distress

the English word distress
derived from the Old French word destresser
derived from the Old French word destresse
derived from the Latin root *districtia
derived from the Medieval Latin word districtus (busy; having many claims on one's attention; pulled in different directions)
derived from the Latin word distringere (stretch out, apart; detain)
using the Latin prefix dis-
derived from the Latin word stringere (draw tight; draw; graze)
derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *streig-

Date

The earliest known usage of distress in English dates from the 13th century.

Derivations in English

distressful, distressed, distressing

Usage

Word found in Modern English



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