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    lan·guish
    /ˈlaNGɡwiSH/

    verb

    • 1. (of a person or other living thing) lose or lack vitality; grow weak or feeble: "plants may appear to be languishing simply because they are dormant" Similar weakengrow weakdeterioratedeclineOpposite thriveflourish
    • 2. suffer from being forced to remain in an unpleasant place or situation: "he has been languishing in jail since 1974" Similar waste awayrotdecaywither away

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. to exist in an unpleasant or unwanted situation, often for a long time: Members of Congress have introduced plans, but those have languished.

  3. The meaning of LANGUISH is to be or become feeble, weak, or enervated. How to use languish in a sentence.

  4. LANGUISH meaning: 1. to exist in an unpleasant or unwanted situation, often for a long time: 2. to exist in an…. Learn more.

  5. To languish is to become pitiful or weak because you're sick, in love, or stuck somewhere. A prisoner might languish in jail, longing for her freedom. Languish, like languid, is from the Latin word languere which means "to be weak or faint." Your houseplants might languish in a dark dry corner.

  6. to lose or diminish in strength or energy. 2. (often foll by for) to be listless with desire; pine. 3. to suffer deprivation, hardship, or neglect. to languish in prison. 4. to put on a tender, nostalgic, or melancholic expression. Collins English Dictionary.

  7. 1. to be or become weak or feeble; droop; fade. 2. to lose vigor and vitality. 3. to suffer neglect, distress, or hardship: to languish in prison.

  8. LANGUISH meaning: to continue for a long time without activity or progress in an unpleasant or unwanted situation usually + in.

  9. Definition of languish verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  10. LANGUISH definition: to stay in an unpleasant or difficult situation for a long time: . Learn more.

  11. to undergo neglect or experience prolonged inactivity; suffer hardship and distress: to languish in prison for ten years. to be subjected to delay or disregard; be ignored: a petition that languished on the warden's desk for a year.

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