Etymologists are pretty certain that travail comes from trepalium, the Late Latin name of an instrument of torture. We don't know exactly what a trepalium looked like, but the word's history gives us an idea. Trepalium is derived from the Latin tripalis, which means "having three stakes" (from tri-, meaning "three," and palus, meaning "stake"). From trepalium sprang the Anglo-French verb travailler, which originally meant "to torment" but eventually acquired the milder senses "to trouble" and "to journey." The Anglo-French noun travail was borrowed into English in the 13th century, along with another descendant of travailler, travel.
Noun
They finally succeeded after many months of travail.
no greater travail than that of parents who have suffered the death of a child Verb
Labor Day is the day on which we recognize those men and women who daily travail with little appreciation or compensation.
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Noun
Political angle The country’s two biggest parties look once again on track to form a government, despite some travails for Fine Gael as the campaign winds down.—Michael Considine, CNBC, 28 Nov. 2024 But Hasina’s ouster both expunged his legal travails and presented a late career change as his tormentor’s successor.—Charlie Campbell, TIME, 21 Nov. 2024
Verb
Clap back:DeSantis criticizes 'daily drama' of Trump's leadership style, ratcheting up growing tensions Trump travails:Is Donald Trump being arrested?—David Jackson, USA TODAY, 23 Mar. 2023 See all Example Sentences for travail
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English, from Anglo-French, from travailler to torment, labor, journey, from Vulgar Latin *trepaliare to torture, from Late Latin trepalium instrument of torture, from Latin tripalis having three stakes, from tri- + palus stake — more at pole
Middle English travail "hard labor," from early French travail (same meaning), from travailler (verb) "to torment, labor" — related to travel see Word History at travel
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