The disease afflicts an estimated two million people every year.
the South was afflicted by a severe drought
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What afflicts the great star of the court can equally afflict the great star of the quad.—Adam Gopnik, The New Yorker, 20 Jan. 2025 Among them was the plight of Marie Freyre, a 14-year-old afflicted with cerebral palsy and seizures who died within 24 hours of a long, bumpy ride from a Tampa hospital to the Golden Glades nursing home, ordered despite objections from her family.—Carol Marbin Miller, Miami Herald, 17 Jan. 2025 It was often dismissed as a problem afflicting less mature democracies and developing countries.—Isabella M. Weber, Foreign Affairs, 15 Jan. 2025 Across the region, the afflicted include everyday Angelenos and Hollywood celebrities.—Andrew Ross Sorkin, New York Times, 10 Jan. 2025 See all Example Sentences for afflict
Word History
Etymology
Middle English afflihten "to excite, become distressed," probably verbal derivative of affliht, aflyght "disturbed, upset," borrowed from Latin afflīctus, past participle of afflīgere "to knock or strike down, ruin, distress severely," from ad-ad- + flīgere "to strike down" — more at profligate entry 1
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