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64 Sentences With "hard to bear"

How to use hard to bear in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "hard to bear" and check conjugation/comparative form for "hard to bear". Mastering all the usages of "hard to bear" from sentence examples published by news publications.

It's cutting, shocking, and painful in ways that can be hard to bear.
Poverty, always hard to bear, is made all the harder by stark comparisons.
The discordance of not knowing what and whom to believe is hard to bear.
The thought of having the stigma of imprisonment after imprisonment is terrifying, depressing, hard to bear.
But Martin also underlines the ways in which Mae is hard to bear and tricky to handle.
Park employees described the stress of the day to day decisionmaking at NPS as hard to bear.
And to not have a public statement of support that Paul is wrongfully detained in Russia is hard to bear.
But for those dark moments when a horticultural rebuke is too hard to bear, you need some plants that will withstand your neglect.
It can be hard to bear their yelling, and a lot of them want to talk to you the whole ride when they're drunk.
Some of this can be almost too hard to bear; there are images of discarded fetuses and a story about a pregnant woman's attempted escape.
The burdens of caring for three children and a jobless husband, while separated from the son she left behind in Myanmar, are still hard to bear.
The dark, cold days of a Canadian winter can be long and hard to bear, especially in areas where they can stretch through half of the year.
It is hard to bear the allostatic load of living as a black woman in a country where we continually have to assert our right to personhood.
The 10 percent tariff still left a profit for the processors, but the higher 25 percent rate will be "quite hard to bear," the Antaike analyst said.
Unsworth has been in the court for the entire trial, listening to testimony he clearly finds hard to bear; Musk showed up for his testimony and vanished.
"I work hard to bear witness that we must not use such demonic atomic bombs again, nor let anyone in the world endure such suffering," she said.
Our narrator illustrates the love that Gabe has for Sam, even when it's really hard to bear the brunt of conversations about racial identity when he's around her friends.
On a day-to-day level, it has created a working culture that is increasingly hard to bear, says Sam, a Cathay crew member who wished to remain anonymous.
I have a little boy at home myself, nearly 2 years old, and since his birth I've found it hard to bear stories of sad things happening to children.
Hard to Bear To the Editor: I am writing in response to Rachel Cusk's review of "Avalanche," by Julia Leigh, and "The Art of Waiting," by Belle Boggs (Sept. 4).
If Lenny's effusiveness was sometimes hard to bear, plenty of smart people couldn't get enough of him, including Mike Nichols, Richard Avedon, Betty Comden, Adolph Green, and the young Stephen Sondheim.
In December, the remote CX employees announced their plans to unionize with the Communications Workers of America, saying their low pay and frenetic work schedules had become increasingly hard to bear.
Compensated daters also have to stay underground—in Hong Kong, the stigma and shame of sex work, especially for a girl who should be studying in high school, is hard to bear.
I know that it would be particularly hard to bear for all of us if it was confirmed that the person who committed this crime had asked for protection and asylum in Germany.
In this former fishing village, the place where the Tunisian tourist industry began in the early 1960s, tourism is the only game in town, and the sense of ennui—of thwarted hospitality—is hard to bear.
I like to know that I'm not having an inexplicable experience that no one else has ever had; it's also hard to bear the weight of a label that carries with it so much stigma, especially one like schizoaffective disorder.
It doesn't make them any less valuable, or less necessary; every other objective and convincing thing would be hard to bear without having those stories and the characters in them running in parallel with us, for when we need them.
As she kept her eye on a downcast little girl who was ordinarily cheerful and lively, Ms. Lopez, 59, said the devastation on the island has been hard to bear, and she misses family members who have gone to the mainland.
That kind of uncertainty not only creates more work in the hiring process—a burden particularly hard to bear for small businesses—but inevitably leads to more costly, profit-eating lawsuits—which no one, least of all employers, could claim to want.
Lower-income families would end up paying less; middle-class families whose income is now just a bit too high to qualify for subsidies, yet still find the cost of insurance hard to bear, would be brought into the system and see major gains.
Although this loneliness is hard to bear at times, I admit it is also a twisted badge of honor: that I made the sacrifice to become a lonely child miles and miles from home, in the hope of repaying the sacrifices my family made to get me here in the first place.
Many of the photographs were held by someone else before the artist came around, including portraits carried by Iraqi and Syrian refugees rephotographed with annotation by Jim Lommasson, and donated snapshots given to the artist Jason Lazarus that were, for their former owners, "too hard to bear" but also too hard to throw out.
The softboi is a totem of the world we live in, in which emotional connections are easy to make, hard to bear and easy to break, in which PR is king and even bad, sometimes abusive men—not to mention governments and corporations—know they need to speak the emotional, inclusive language of the day in order to get away with what they do.
"Big-Play Buccaneers Top Bad-Mouth Bears". Ocala Star-Banner. 1 Nov 1981Squires, David R. "Chicago finds this defeat hard to bear". St. Petersburg Times.
The wailing > was indescribable. I shall never forget the scene throughout my life. I find > it very hard to bear. I particularly remember a small fair-haired girl who > took me by the hand.
At the age of 52, she was required to wear dresses weighing while walking or dancing a total of during a 3½ hour performance eight times a week. Lawrence found it hard to bear the heat in the theatre during the summer months. Understudy Constance Carpenter began replacing her in matinee performances.
Their whereabouts are currently unknown, and Kim told the Independent that their arrests "devastated" him. "The stress of knowing that could happen again is very hard to bear." In 2006, Kim met George W. Bush and was honored by the Bush administration. His interview is a permanent feature of the George W. Bush Institute Freedom Collection.
Perkins, Tunisia (Westview 1986) at 19. Yet only about one sixth of the population could participate fully in the culture of city life, as "the other five sixths lived in a poverty that was at times terribly hard to bear and almost impossible to escape." Nonetheless, public buildings and spaces, such as the thermal baths, were available.
The harm suffered by the psalmist is very hard to bear, although we can not know precisely its nature. The Psalm seeks to understand where it comes from, because at the time, misfortune is understood as a consequence of the sins one has committed. But far from being an opportunity to revolt, this event leads him to experience God's forgiveness.
The Rabbis taught in a Baraita that the Evil Inclination is hard to bear, since even God its Creator called it evil, as in , God says, "the desire of man's heart is evil from his youth."Babylonian Talmud Kiddushin 30b, in, e.g., Talmud Bavli. Elucidated by David Fohrman, Dovid Kamenetsky, and Hersh Goldwurm; edited by Hersh Goldwurm, volume 36, page 30b2.
Rosebery found this particularly hard to bear, and wrote to Queen Victoria of the pain he experienced when "another creed steps in to claim the corpse."Crewe, Vol. 2, p. 370. It was only after her death that the doctors who had treated her disclosed to Rosebery that her kidney condition would have killed her within two years even if she had not contracted typhoid.
The Black Loyalists there found both the discrimination and climate hard to bear. (See Black Nova Scotians.) Wealthy African-American shipowner Paul Cuffe thought that colonization was worth supporting. Aided by support from certain members of Congress and British officials, he transported 38 American blacks to Freetown in 1816 at his own expense. He died in 1817, but his private initiative helped arouse public interest in the idea of colonization.
Reynolds, pp. 241, 255 The private life of Madame Roland was turbulent during this period. A passionate but in her own words platonic romance had developed between her and the Girondin deputy François Buzot, who she had first met as a visitor to her salon. This affected her relationship with her husband, who found the idea that his wife was in love with another man hard to bear.
Clouds were gathering, which were to break in a few years' time. There were grave faults on both sides. The officiousness and tyranny of the mandarins were hard to bear, but on the English rested the more grievous responsibility of resolving to force a trade in opium on the Chinese people. War would come later, and might would be on the side of England, and right on the side of China.
Next day, Lobzang Gyatso sent a second message to Norbu, scolding him for having failed in the past to do his duty well. Then, he restricted Norbu's powers regarding the Regent's official residence, preventing him from using it for personal ends. All this would have been hard to bear for Norbu who was used to doing as he liked with impunity under his now deceased brother's protection.Karmay 2014, p.
18, p.373. This kind of damage made life in Fort Jackson a misery when combined with constant flooding from high water within the fort. The crew could be safe from mortar fragments and falling debris only within the dank and partially flooded casemates. Lack of shelter, food, blankets, sleeping quarters, drinkable water, along with the depressing effects of days of heavy, unanswered shelling were hard to bear.
Otto and Edith sleep in one room, with Margot and Anne next door in another. At the very top of the building is a disused attic for storing food. This soon becomes Anne's getaway, as she is able to gaze outside at a chestnut tree and the tower of the Westerkerk. At first, Edith and Margot find the confinement hard to bear, while Otto and Anne sew material together to make black-out curtains.
The song features a childlike section ("No care / No no"). The song segues into "I Never Lied to You" with the aid of Wright's organ. "I Never Lied to You" is the final of three songs on the album which lyrics point to anguish ("It's been so hard to bear with you not there"). "Wined and Dined" dated from Barrett's Cambridge days, and is about the relationship between Barrett and his then-girlfriend, Gayla Pinion, a model from Cambridge.
This adverse reaction, which was not intended by Walschap, hurt him and after a long inner struggle and doubt he abandoned his faith and became a secular humanist. This inner struggle (with faith), would remain of significant importance in his literary work. Adelaide became part of the De familie Roothooft. In part of his work he considers society a burden which is hard to bear, such as in De bejegening van Christus (E: Meeting with Christ) (1940).
This occurred while she was living in Portland, Maine, and probably attending the Bracket Street School. This, she said, started her conversion: "This misfortune, which for a time seemed so bitter and was so hard to bear, has proved to be a blessing in disguise. The cruel blow which blighted the joys of earth, was the means of turning my eyes to heaven. I might never had known Jesus Christ, had not the sorrow that clouded my early years led me to seek comfort in him".
The Joliot-Curies in the 1940s Irène and Frédéric hyphenated their surnames to Joliot-Curie after they married in 1926. The Joliot-Curies had two children, Hélène, born eleven months after they were married, and Pierre, born in 1932. Between 1941 and 1943 during World War II, Joliot-Curie contracted tuberculosis and was forced to spend time convalescing in Switzerland. Concern for her own health together with the anguish of her husband being in the resistance against the German troops and her children in occupied France was hard to bear.
355–356 Two months after the end of the war, the King's youngest son, John, died at the age of 13 after a lifetime of ill health. George was informed of his death by Queen Mary, who wrote, "[John] had been a great anxiety to us for many years ... The first break in the family circle is hard to bear but people have been so kind & sympathetic & this has helped us much."Pope-Hennessy, p. 511 In May 1922, the King toured Belgium and northern France, visiting the First World War cemeteries and memorials being constructed by the Imperial War Graves Commission.
As described in a film magazine, Genevieve Granger-Simpson (Nilsson), belle and heiress of her town of Kokomo, Indiana, is given a farewell party on the eve of her departure with her brother Horace (Kerr) to Italy. Her guardian Daniel Forbes Pike (Kirkwood) is downcast until he learns that Genevieve loves him, and then the farewell is less hard to bear. In Italy Genevieve is dazzled by the attentions of Prince Kinsillo (Kerry), a member of one of the impoverished fragments of nobility that infest Italy. With his father and sister's aid, he schemes to land the American heiress.
In October 1867, Wilson and sixty one other Fenians began the long sea voyage on board the Hougoumont to Australia. Notes on the Mountjoy prison photographs suggest this is also Wilson Life in Fremantle was hard. Wilson had been sentenced to penal servitude, and found the monotony and work involved so hard to bear that he wrote to a New York City journalist, John Devoy entitling his letter, A Voice From the Tomb after having been in jail for some nine years. Devoy was moved enough by Wilson's description of the conditions under which he and his colleagues laboured to begin collecting money amongst the American- Irish community to organise their rescue.
Even the ever-patient Jane finds her mother's complaints hard to bear, when Mrs. Bennet manifests "a longer irritation than usual" about the absence of Mr. Bingley, confessing to Elizabeth how much the lack of self-control of her mother revives her suffering ("Oh that my dear mother had more command over herself! she can have no idea of the pain she gives me by her continual reflections on him"). Another emphasized and systematically ridiculed aspect is her "nervous disease" or rather her tendency to use her alleged weakness nervous to get noticed and attract compassion to herself, or else demanding that they dance attendance on her leave, but ultimately failing to make herself loved.
An opportunity was provided by Charles, who decommissioned most of the Royal Navy in late 1666 as a cost-saving measure. The Dutch took full advantage in the June Medway Raid; although the action itself had limited strategic impact, it was a humiliation Charles never forgot. Holles and Coventry initially assumed this would extend negotiations, but the need to create an alliance against France meant Spain threatened to withhold implementation of the Madrid treaty, supported by Leopold. Combined with economic losses caused by the war and the Fire of London, Clarendon instructed Holles to agree terms "to calm people's minds" and "free the king from a burden...he is finding hard to bear".
" Yet if one wishes, one can rule over the Evil Inclination, as says: "and you shall rule over him." The Rabbis taught in a Baraita that the Evil Inclination is hard to bear, since even God its Creator called it evil, as in , God says, "the desire of man's heart is evil from his youth." Rav Isaac taught that a person's Evil Inclination renews itself against that person daily, as says, "Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil every day." And Rabbi Simeon ben Levi (or others say Rabbi Simeon ben Lakish) taught that a person's Evil Inclination gathers strength against that person daily and seeks to slay that person, as says, "The wicked watches the righteous, and seeks to slay him.
He was appointed to the Board of Trade in 1707, a post which allowed him to develop his interest in commerce. He was returned again with Jessopp at the 1708 British general election and generally supported distinctively Whig measures, although he found the venality of the party hard to bear at times. In 1710 he was reported as saying "he'll be no Whig any longer, for he says he angered since he came to town some of his old friends by being so reasonable as to maintain 'twas fit the Queen should use her pleasure in disposing employments as she pleases." However, this was clearly a figure of speech, as he was returned unopposed with Jessop again as a Whig at the 1710 British general election.
Mary later wrote to Emily Alcock, an old friend, that > for [John] it is a great relief, as his malady was becoming worse as he grew > older,& he has thus been spared much suffering. I cannot say how grateful we > feel to God for having taken him in such a peaceful way, he just slept > quietly into his heavenly home, no pain no struggle, just peace for the poor > little troubled spirit which had been a great anxiety to us for many years, > ever since he was four years old. She went on to add that "the first break in the family circle is hard to bear, but people have been so kind& sympathetic& this has helped us much." George described his son's death simply as "the greatest mercy possible".
Though the rations were also from time to time augmented by cargo washed ashore from ships that occasionally hit stray mines. But despite this successful improvisation, the situation would have become untenable if a large part of the "nonessential" population had not been evacuated to other places in liberated Zuid Beveland and Noord Brabant after the hostilities in those areas ended. The lack of electricity and the impossibility of normal heating must have made life hard to bear in the Winter months in this inundated village. And even after the island had been drained, and electric power generation had been fully restored, in many cases people had to await the rewiring of their homes, before they could use electricity again, a process that took until far in 1946.
Shapely falcon of Sliabh Gael, Protection to the bards thou gav'st, Dragon of Lewis of sandy slopes, Glad as the whisper of a stream; The loss of but a single man Has left me lonely, now he's gone. No sport, no pleasing song, No joy, nor pleasure in the feast; No man whom I can now love, Of Nial's race down from Niel og; Among our women there's no joy, Our men no pleasure have in sport, Just like the winds when it is calm, So without music is Dun Sween. See the palace of a generous race, Vengeance is taken on clan Neil, The cause of many a boastful son, And will till they lay us in the grave; And now 'tis hard to bear, alas! That we should lose on every side.
On Carmel's scenes in the episode, Kate White from Inside Soap reported that Carmel has a "big shock" when Shakil tells her that her former husband wants her back, as Carmel has "spent a long time coming to terms with Umar's decision to leave her for another woman, and the pain of their separation remains hard to bear", and said that "Carmel is stunned to hear of his romantic intentions." An EastEnders source said that Carmel "found it hard to let him go, even as Umar didn't seem to give her a second thought." The scenes in this episode set up scenes for the following episode where Carmel prepares to meet Umar. Although Shakil does not appear in this episode, the scenes also lead to his introduction in the following episode, which reveals that Shakil has lied in this episode.
" The Rabbis taught in a Baraita that the Evil Inclination is hard to bear, since even God its Creator called it evil, as in , God says, "the desire of man's heart is evil from his youth." Rav Isaac taught that a person's Evil Inclination renews itself against that person daily, as says, "Every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil every day." And Rabbi Simeon ben Levi (or others say Rabbi Simeon ben Lakish) taught that a person's Evil Inclination gathers strength against that person daily and seeks to slay that person, as says, "The wicked watches the righteous, and seeks to slay him." And if God were not to help a person, one would not be able to prevail against one's Evil Inclination, for as says, "The Lord will not leave him in his hand.
Hans Bonarewitz being taken to his execution after escaping and being recaptured 7 July 1942 Mauthausen was not the only concentration camp where the German authorities implemented their extermination through labour (Vernichtung durch Arbeit) programme, but the regime at Mauthausen was one of the most brutal and severe. The conditions within the camp were considered exceptionally hard to bear, even by concentration camp standards. The inmates suffered not only from malnutrition, overcrowded huts and constant abuse and beatings by the guards and kapos, but also from exceptionally hard labour. As there were too many prisoners in Mauthausen to have all of them work in its quarry at the same time, many were put to work in workshops, or had to do other manual work, whilst the unfortunate ones who were selected to work in the quarry were only there because of their so-called "crimes" in the camp.

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