enervating in the Oxford-Paravia Italian Dictionary

enervating in the PONS Dictionary

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
Diffident as he may be, the fact that the lucrative songwriting credits are solely in the name of his notoriously thrifty sibling must be a little enervating.
www.independent.co.uk
But the new currency help pull hoarded goods back into shops and tamped down on the enervating effects of the black market.
qz.com
But despite moments of cockeyed humor and occasional flashes of genuine inspiration, this 150-minute evocation of 18th century atmospheres is an enervating, embalmed affair.
www.hollywoodreporter.com
To approach leadership with the enervating mind-set of being elected to preside over a boom is to prepare to underachieve or simply muddle along.
thenationonlineng.net
There was much incompetence and poor judgement, with music of an enervating facility.
www.catholicherald.co.uk
Such is the enervating cloudiness, the occluding intensity, that it reminds one of a historic eclipse.
thenationonlineng.net
Fourth and finally, there is the enervating effect of working on an investigation that agents strongly suspect is not going to result in charges.
www.aim.org
But all that tranced stillness can become enervating, and it takes a sure hand to maintain the momentum in the more reflective passages.
www.telegraph.co.uk
But that the illness could cause grief (such as my enervating headaches) other than a rash (the most common symptom) was news to me.
www.independent.co.uk
Leaping from an enervating career to a more satisfying one can be good for health.
www.afr.com

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