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Discover Ludwig"torment with" is a correct and usable phrase in written English.
You can use it in a sentence to describe a situation in which someone is experiencing intense suffering, either mentally or physically. For example, "John was tormented with guilt for his involvement in the robbery."
Exact(25)
The sister had ascended the throne of torment with gusto.
It's a tale of absolutist ideals that seemed to curdle and of private torment with drastic results.
Some spoke reluctantly, not wanting to compare their torment with the agony of the families of the children and adult victims.
But for many they remain a place of torment, with 65 per cent of those polled in Stonewall's Living Together report saying they witnessed homophobic bullying.
Smokey Robinson's fabulous You Really Got a Hold On Me has its emotional compass shifted from melancholy to torment, with electrifying results.
(The long-suffering Alma at one point erupts at her husband about his glittering fixation, snapping that she is "not one of the contract blondes you badger and torment with your oh-so-specific direction").
Similar(35)
Then hung up by his wrists ("the ghost"), and whipped and tormented with electric cattle prods.
His sex was quivering, and he was tormented with desire … Marianne grew desperate.
One of those arrested, Earl Faison, died in custody after being tormented with pepper spray.
It leaves women overcome with anxiety, tormented with thoughts of self-harm towards themselves or their babies.
Gay Ugandans are tormented with beatings, blackmail, death threats and what has been described as "correctional rape".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com