Sentences with word «malaise»

The word "malaise" refers to a general feeling of discomfort, unease, or a lack of energy or motivation. It can describe a sense of physical or emotional discomfort or a mild illness. Full definition
As the 1970s came to a close, the Pollution Probe Foundation was in a state of financial disarray, in large part due to the general economic malaise of the time.
As my husband and I confront an empty nest this fall, the waves of nostalgia and the general malaise of feeling old are tempered by happy thoughts of being able to finally relax and really enjoy our home.
The discharge isn't associated with discomfort or feelings of malaise in dogs.
While many might continue to associate the economic malaise of Detroit, where President Obama issued an auto - industry bailout in 2009, with Holland, Hoffswell flags that the city has experienced a rapid recovery and looks nothing like the Motor City these days.
This may seem no less arbitrary than choosing from the smorgasbord itself, but it will at least provide a means for organizing the menu; and a consideration of how these themes are treated in recent theology will reveal basic issues of appetite and nutrition underlying the current malaise in theology.
The current malaise at Arsenal seems like it will get much worse before it gets better.
It's a general malaise with American's deteriorating loyalty program (and frankly all non-flexible travel loyalty programs).
President Draghi said the ECB was correct in its policies, and current and trade surplus nations were at fault for the continued economic malaise for not embarking on large fiscal stimulus programs.
From installation and sculpture made of edible materials to performance and conceptual objects he explores social malaise in the face of a frustrating system, the defeat of the institutions, globalization and the submission of the Mexican government to U.S. dictates among others subjects.
On the cover of the Sunday Styles section, Alex Williams describes studies pointing to a strong sense of malaise about bursts of obligatory spending, particularly around the holidays: «A 2005 survey by the Center for a New American Dream showed that 78 percent of Americans wish the holidays were «less materialistic.»
Cancer also causes general malaise which can make dogs not want to eat.
The film is an unsentimental investigation into modern malaise with each of the main characters exhibiting some aspect of wasted opportunity as they persevere in a cruelly disinterested world.
Sunderland's inept display in the 8 - 0 humbling at Southampton came out of the blue but was it a one - off or a sign of a deeper malaise at the club?
Gov. Andrew Cuomo wrote an opinion piece in this morning's Daily News, touting the recent state budget as a response to income inequality — and as a counternarrative to politicians like Donald Trump who are trying to capitalize on economic malaise by scapegoating other...
But these forays into malaise delay can't last forever.
This reflected a wider malaise in the training regime at Morton Hall which needs to be addressed urgently by the Ministry of Justice.»
Today, many of those who blame our current economic malaise on former President Jonathan were the very people who went to court to challenge that administration on its desire to save for the rainy day via the Excess Crude Account.
George Steiner describes this spiritual malaise as a «core - tiredness,» the loss of «our capacity to hope, to truly speak in the future tense.»
A statement from the Compass [i] pressure group argues that the Falkirk selection is a symptom of a much deeper political malaise because none of the traditional, mainstream political parties are thriving today.
And yep, there's more Malaise Era quality here, with black screws and overlapping trim.
The Oranges borrowed the underlying suburban malaise of «American Beauty» and remolded it into a comedy.
Its political battles, formed in the dark days of the 1970s, won, the Tory party struggled to identify itself or its purpose, and it collapsed into its own internal chaos while the Labour party had rescued itself from its own malaise by cutting the party machine off from its traditional constituency, and reinvented its image.
Impressive editing, production design, and cinematography from Nicolas Karakatsanis (who along with his work on The Drop, proves to be a master of urban malaise in the metropolis) are enhanced in this release, one of those titles inevitably deemed «kinetic.»
Sven Jurschewsky, another retired Canadian foreign service officer who has headed various departments in the foreign affairs ministry, points to an overall malaise in Canada's public service.
Alex Aldridge in The Guardian: Does the sacking of Christopher Grierson over # 1m in false expenses reflect a wider moral malaise among City lawyers?
While that film felt like a seamless fusion of the middle - aged malaise seen in Greenberg with the youthful energy and aimless freedom of Frances Ha, his newest feature, Mistress America, is very much back in the realm of the latter.
Whether it's players such as Theo Walcott or Alex Oxlade - Chamberlain who haven't delivered consistently, or Mesut Ozil's current malaise during which he has not been dropped.
After the stock market malaise of the 2000s, attitudes changed — out of necessity.
While the broad economic malaise affected Dover's competitors as well, the Company's lack of scale, its unprofitable tracks, and its reliance on a single facility (Dover) for its operating profit left the Company more vulnerable to undesirable economic conditions and underperformance.
Braus said that if the retail malaise continues, defaults and other problems could soon follow.
Eric Fischl presents new paintings at Skarstedt Gallery in «Late America,» an exhibition that continues the artist's theme of exploring moral ambivalence and social malaise while depicting scenes around suburban pools.
Pundits are attributing Lockheed Martin's stock slide this morning to a general malaise among defense industry investors after last week's dismal performance.
According to Richard Williams from The Guardian, coach Wenger is the real malaise at the core of the team, as he was never seen to do anything to motivate the players to improve their performance.
Hardware sales can be indicative of widespread consumer malaise surrounding off - beat tablets like Nook, but a digital sales slump suggests customers are looking elsewhere for their reading needs.
A fearless tragicomedy about hope, dread, longing, and forgiveness, Life During Wartime (2010) is Todd Solondz's boldest and most haunting movie to date, carrying his exploration of Middle American malaise into new territory.
Another is gathering attention; the very modern malaise known as wind turbine syndrome.
Flying insects were trapped in malaise traps and the total biomass was then weighed and compared.
The grand irony is that Liberal Arts is, for all intents and purposes, the Twilight of post-college malaise movies.
When the horrendous crimes of Josef Fritzl were discovered in 2008 - he had imprisoned and sexually abused his daughter in a secret cellar in the Austrian family home for 24 years - many looked to Austria's artists for ways of understanding the horror as a possible symptom of national malaise, especially as another Austrian kidnap / imprisonment victim, Natascha Kampusch, had been in the news two years before.
This doc about bile - spilling anarcho - rockers Sleaford Mods is also an encapsulation of working class malaise.
Part of my style malaise is seasonal.
There he encountered the bohemian society of Saint - Germain - de-Prés, people in a bitter post-war malaise.
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