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The phrase "agonizing experiences" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe situations or events that cause extreme emotional or physical pain and distress.
Example: "The survivors recounted their agonizing experiences during the natural disaster, detailing the fear and loss they faced."
Alternatives: "painful experiences" or "traumatic experiences".
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"Even if China develops to being formidable, we will not pursue hegemony," he promised, using political jargon to mean tyrannical or bullying, "because we have been deeply affected by agonizing experiences in China's recent and contemporary history.
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Roger Ebert called it "an agonizing experience in every category I can think of and others still waiting to be invented".
Gill-slits in the embryo, useless hair on the body & head, a pelvis so degenerate that childbirth is an agonizing experience.
Gill-slits in the embryo, useless hair on the body & head, a pelvis so degenerate that childbirth is an agonizing experience.
Yesterday, I wrote about the remarkable if agonizing experience of selecting three Pulitzer Prize nominees in fiction from over three hundred books by American writers.
By Michael Cunningham July 10 , 2012 Yesterday I wrote about the remarkable if agonizing experience of selecting three Pulitzer Prize nominees in fiction from over three hundred books by American writers.
For all the physical pain, the most agonizing experience was never being told why he was arrested in 1945 on charges of espionage.
Both during and after the most torturous and agonizing experience imaginable, Christ repeatedly asked the Father for the forgiveness of those who brought this evil upon him.
The episode reminded me uncomfortably of reading about Tallulah Bankhead's agonizing experience when she undertook the role of Blanche DuBois in a 1956 revival of "A Streetcar Named Desire".
Today such an agonizing experience (in a moneyed, Western culture) might be met with a team of therapists and a prescription pad, or at least some awareness of the psychological fallout to come.
DealBook » Confessions of a Financial Pro || Carl Richards, a financial planner, chronicles in The New York Times the tale of his agonizing experience in the housing crash, after he bought a home with 100 percent borrowed money.
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