84 adjectives to describe hardships

You have still to undergo severe hardships, to make long marches, to fight hard battles.

It came out, reduced by desertion as well as by almost incredible hardships, with barely seven hundred.

And so it happened that Antony effected his retreat across the Alps, but not without extreme hardships, which he bore in common with the meanest soldier.

With what horrour, my lords, such a proposal would be heard, how loudly it would be censured, and how universally rejected, I need not say; but must observe, that, in my opinion, the detestation would arise principally from a sense of the injustice of exposing any man to peculiar hardships, and distinguishing him to his disadvantage from the rest of the community.

After innumerable hardships and perils he arrived in the land of Persia, and inquired for the great king.

Think only of what you have been ordered to do and how best you can handle your men to accomplish your mission, and at the same time save the men from any unnecessary hardships.

I do not mention this so much as an intolerable hardship upon those who have to perform it, as an improvident waste of strength and time.

Though kindly treated by Dupper and his family, and made as comfortable as their savage mode of life would allow, yet they suffered many cruel hardships, and severely felt the change from their former to their present way of living.

In all the arenas of the great struggle, the winter campaign of 1915-16, the second winter of the war, was accompanied by unparalleled hardships and sufferings.

We are to hold the balance of the constitution, and neither to suffer the regal power to be overborne by a torrent of popular fury, nor the people to be oppressed by an illegal exertion of authority, or the more insupportable hardships of unreasonable laws.

The people at large were allowed no share in their own earnings, beyond a subsistence so scanty that deep humiliation and grievous hardship were the fateful rewards of labor.

Outwardly their life was a constant hardship, a perpetual struggle against savage nature and savage men.

She was even jaunty in her recital of the weather's minor hardships.

While the war-whoop of the savage still echoed within the surrounding valleys and his council fires blazed upon the hills, those daring adventurers penetrated the hitherto pathless wilderness and passed through unexampled hardships with heroic endurance.

The volcano is examined by thousands of tourists, this being one of the spots to reach which scientists are willing to incur countless hardships and risks.

They next built fires about him and burned him out; but in doing so they did not capture or injure him, and he pushed through the mountains for Monterey; and after a month's travel, in which he endured unheard-of hardships and suffering, he reached that place in safety.

He showed that in all countries, where there were no unnatural hardships, mankind would support themselves.

The work done by the original explorers of such a wilderness necessitates the undergoing of untold hardship and danger.

Rice had toiled among these people six years, receiving very little financial aid, and suffering unusual hardships.

The process of displacement in particular trades has been responsible for a large amount of actual hardship and suffering among the working-classes.

Many of these pioneers of civilization endure extraordinary hardships during their expeditions; as an example of which I may mention that Mr. Bonny, in endeavouring to find a new route, was compelled to kill a calf and drink its blood to save his life.

In considering the whole condition of the people on this plantation, it appears to me that the principal hardships fall to the lot of the women; that is, the principal physical hardships.

They had suffered fearful hardships in the open boat, being at one time, he averred, twenty-one days without water, during which time one man died of thirst.

He dreamed, at first, that the deadly hardships of the journey could be atoned for by years of luxury and ease.

There he kept, under cover, for the greater part of the winter, that army, which, though fortified by frequent and continued hardships against every human ill, had yet never experienced or been habituated to prosperity.

84 adjectives to describe  hardships