different between pressing vs uncomfortable

pressing

English

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?p??s??/

Adjective

pressing (comparative more pressing, superlative most pressing)

  1. Needing urgent attention.
    • 2013, Luke Harding and Uki Goni, Argentina urges UK to hand back Falklands and 'end colonialism' (in The Guardian, 3 January 2013)[1]
      Argentinians support the "Malvinas" cause, which is written into the constitution. But they are also worried about pressing economic problems such as inflation, rising crime and corruption.
    • 1841, Charles Dickens, Barnaby Rudge, ch. 75,
      “I come on business.—Private,” he added, with a glance at the man who stood looking on, “and very pressing business.”
  2. Insistent, earnest, or persistent.
    • 1891, Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray, ch. 2,
      You are very pressing, Basil, but I am afraid I must go.
    • 1908, Joseph Conrad, "The Duel,"
      He was pressing and persuasive.

Quotations

  • For more quotations using this term, see Citations:pressing.

Derived terms

  • pressingly
  • pressingness

Translations

Noun

pressing (plural pressings)

  1. The application of pressure by a press or other means.
  2. A metal or plastic part made with a press.
  3. The process of improving the appearance of clothing by improving creases and removing wrinkles with a press or an iron.
  4. A memento preserved by pressing, folding, or drying between the leaves of a flat container, book, or folio. Usually done with a flower, ribbon, letter, or other soft, small keepsake.
  5. The extraction of juice from fruit using a press.
  6. A phonograph record; a number of records pressed at the same time.
  7. Urgent insistence.

Verb

pressing

  1. present participle of press

Anagrams

  • Persings, Spigners, spersing, springes

French

Etymology

A pseudo-anglicism.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /p??.si?/, /p?e.si?/

Noun

pressing m (plural pressings)

  1. dry cleaning shop, a dry-cleaner's

Italian

Noun

pressing m (invariable)

  1. (sports, especially soccer) Continuous and pressing action that does not allow the opposing team to catch its breath, aiming to remove the ball from its possession
  2. (figuratively, transferred sense) Pressing (application of pressure)

pressing From the web:

  • what pressing is my record
  • what pressing is my vinyl


uncomfortable

English

Etymology

un- +? comfortable

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?n?k?mf.t?.b?l/, /?n?k?m.f?.t?.b?l/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /?n?k?m.f?.t?.b?l/, /?n?k?mf.t?.b?l/

Adjective

uncomfortable (comparative more uncomfortable, superlative most uncomfortable)

  1. Not comfortable; causing discomfort.
  2. Experiencing discomfort.
  3. Uneasy or anxious.
  4. Put off or disgusted.

Usage notes

Although the word uncomfortable looks (etymonically) like one of its senses could be synonymous with inconsolable, it does not have that sense; the absence of that sense is simply a lexical gap. In parallel, the same is true of comfortable and consolable, as well as comfortability and consolability.

Synonyms

  • ill at ease

Antonyms

  • comfortable
  • ergonomic

Derived terms

  • uncomfortableness
  • uncomfortably

Translations

uncomfortable From the web:

  • what uncomfortable means
  • what's uncomfortable humidity
  • what's uncomfortable in french
  • what uncomfortable in afrikaans
  • uncomfortable what does it means
  • what causes uncomfortable feeling in the stomach
  • what causes uncomfortable bloating
  • what are uncomfortable questions to ask
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