WEAR vs FATIGUE: NOUN
- The ability to withstand impairment from use or attrition.
- Damage resulting from use or age.
- Clothing, especially of a particular kind or for a particular use. Often used in combination.
- The act of wearing or the state of being worn; use.
- Impairment resulting from long use
- The act of having on your person as a covering or adornment
- A covering designed to be worn on a person's body
- Use; usage received in course of being worn or used; the impairment or diminution in bulk, value, efficiency, etc., which results from use, friction, time, or the like.
- An article or articles worn, or intended or fit to be worn; style of dress, adornment, or the like; hence, fashion; vogue.
- Stuff or material for articles of wear; material for garments, etc.
- The act of wearing or using, or the state of being worn or used, as garments, ornaments, etc.; use: as, a garment not for every-day wear.
- The weakening of a metal bar by the repeated application and removal of a load considerably less than the breaking-weight of the bar, as when car-axles break from the repeated blows and strains which they experience.
- Weariness from bodily labor or mental exertion; lassitude or exhaustion of strength.
- The cause of weariness; labor; toil.
- The weakening of a metal when subjected to repeated vibrations or strains.
- A summons, by bugle or drum, to perform fatigue duties.
- The working dress of soldiers.
- Labor exacted from soldiers aside from the use of arms.
- A party of soldiers on fatigue duty.
- A weariness caused by exertion; exhaustion.
- A menial task, especially in the military.
- A type of material failure due to cumulative effects of cyclic loading.
- Synonyms Fatigue, Weariness, Lassitude. Fatigue is more often physical, but also mental, and is generally the result of active and strenuous exertion: as, the fatigue of ten hours' work, or of close application to books. Weariness may be the same as fatigue; it is, more often than fatigue, the result of less obvious causes, as long sitting or standing in one position, importunity from others, delays, and the like. Fatigue and weariness are natural conditions, from which one easily recovers by rest. Lassitude is a relaxation with languor, the result of greater fatigue or weariness than one can well bear, and may be of the nature of ill health. The word may, however, be used in a lighter sense.
- Temporary loss of strength and energy resulting from hard physical or mental work
- Used of materials (especially metals) in a weakened state caused by long stress
- Labor of a nonmilitary kind done by soldiers (cleaning or digging or draining or so on)
- Physical or mental weariness resulting from effort or activity.
- Something, such as tiring effort or activity, that causes tiredness or weariness.
- The decreased capacity or complete inability of an organism, organ, or part to function normally because of excessive stimulation or prolonged exertion.
- The weakening or failure of a material, such as metal or wood, resulting from prolonged stress.
- Manual or menial labor, such as barracks cleaning, assigned to soldiers.
- Clothing worn by military personnel for labor or for field duty.
- A feeling of weariness following bodily labor or mental exertion; a sense of loss or exhaustion of strength after exertion, trouble, etc.
- A cause or source of weariness; labor; toil: as, the fatigues of war.
- (always used with a modifier) boredom resulting from overexposure to something
- Specifically The labors of military men distinct from the use of arms; fatigue-duty: as, a party of men on fatigue.
WEAR vs FATIGUE: VERB
- Go to pieces
- Put clothing on one's body
- Have on one's person
- Have or show an appearance of
- Deteriorate through use or stress
- Last and be usable
- Be dressed in
- Exhaust or tire through overuse or great strain or stress
- Have in one's aspect; wear an expression of one's attitude or personality
- Exhaust or tire through overuse or great strain or stress
- Get tired of something or somebody
- To tire or make weary by physical or mental exertion
- To lose so much strength or energy that one becomes tired, weary, feeble or exhausted
- Lose interest or become bored with something or somebody
WEAR vs FATIGUE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To bear, carry, or maintain in a particular manner.
- To fly or display (colors). Used of a ship, jockey, or knight.
- To damage, diminish, erode, or consume by long or hard use, attrition, or exposure. Often used with away, down, or off.
- To produce by constant use, attrition, or exposure.
- To bring to a specified condition by long use or attrition.
- To fatigue, weary, or exhaust.
- To make (a sailing ship) come about with the wind aft.
- To last under continual or hard use.
- To last through the passage of time.
- To break down or diminish through use or attrition.
- To pass gradually or tediously.
- To come about with stern to windward.
- To carry or have habitually on one's person, especially as an aid.
- To display in one's appearance.
- To carry or have on one's person as covering, adornment, or protection.
- To be or become tired. : tire.
- To create fatigue in (a metal or other material).
- To tire out; exhaust.
WEAR vs FATIGUE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To consume by frequent or habitual use; deteriorate or waste by wear; use up: as, boots well worn.
- To waste or impair by rubbing or attrition; lessen or diminish by continuous action upon; consume; waste; destroy by degrees.
- Hence To exhaust; weary; fatigue.
- To cause or produce by constant percussion or attrition; form by continual rubbing: as, a constant current of water will wear a channel in stone.
- To efface; obliterate.
- To have or exhibit an appearance of; bear; carry; exhibit; show.
- To disaccustom to one thing and accustom to another; bring gradually; lead: often with in or into before the new thing or state.
- To undergo gradual impairment or diminution through use, attrition, or lapse of time; waste or diminish gradually; become obliterated: often with away, off, or out.
- To lay out; expend; spend; waste; squander. Compare ware.
- To waste or destroy by degrees; consume tediously: as, to wear out life in idle projects.
- Hence— To obliterate; efface.
- To harass; tire completely; fatigue; exhaust; waste or consume the strength of.
- To be in fashion; be in common or recognized use.
- To become fit or suitable by use; become accustomed.
- To last or hold out in course of use or the lapse of time: generally with well or ill.
- Have in one's aspect
- Nautical, to bring (a vessel) on another tack by turning her with her head away from the wind; veer. Also ware.
- To use, affect, or be in the habit of using in one's costume or adornment: as, to wear green.
- To carry or bear on the body as a covering or an appendage for warmth, decency, ornament, or other use; put or have on: as, to wear fine clothes; to wear diamonds.
- (idiom) (wear thin) To become less convincing, acceptable, or popular, as through repeated use.
- (idiom) (wear thin) To be weakened or eroded gradually.
- (idiom) (pants/trousers) To exercise controlling authority in a household.
- To weary with labor or any bodily or mental exertion; lessen or exhaust the strength of by severe or long-continued exertion, by trouble, by anything that harasses, etc.; tire.
- Synonyms Weary, Jade, etc. See tire, verb
WEAR vs FATIGUE: RELATED WORDS
- Put on, Bear, Hold out, Weary, Break, Tire, Assume, Vesture, Fatigue, Endure, Clothes, Apparel, Clothing, Outwear, Don
- Wear upon, Wear out, Wear down, Tire out, Fatigue duty, Jade, Outwear, Pall, Tire, Wear, Anaemia, Weary, Anemia, Weariness, Tiredness
WEAR vs FATIGUE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Have on, Get into, Bust, Jade, Put on, Bear, Weary, Break, Tire, Vesture, Fatigue, Endure, Clothes, Apparel, Outwear
- Endurance, Stress, Exhaustion, Wear out, Wear down, Tire out, Jade, Outwear, Pall, Tire, Wear, Anaemia, Weary, Weariness, Tiredness
WEAR vs FATIGUE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- If you grow out of it or wear it out through fair wear and tear, you can get a free replacement.
- Clothes To Wear Home Your baby is going to need something to wear home, so plan accordingly.
- Remember, judges wear a red sash while justices of the peace wear a green sash.
- Tough Enough To Wear Pink, wear PINK to show your support for Breast Cancer Awareness!
- Most women in Egypt wear skinny jeans and flats, and a lot of young men wear jeans.
- If you wear glasses or contact lenses, you can wear them for the vision test as well.
- For example, Scottish advocates wear tail coats under their gowns, and wear white bow ties instead of bands.
- When checking tire pressure, examine the tires for wear, cuts, nicks, bruises and excessive wear.
- Wear with a different air unit patch guidance, may only for wear the military.
- Wear the same socks you wear during a walk.
- Oil terminal operators should develop a fatigue management plan to ensure that shift work is adequately managed to control risks arising from fatigue.
- For design, a conservative fatigue resistance is assumed at two standard deviations below the mean fatigue resistance or life.
- Survey Taking Fatigue: This type of respondent fatigue happens during the survey.
- Adrenal fatigue symptoms like fatigue, brain fog, and anxiety may actually be caused by a gut imbalance.
- Psychological fatigue precedes peripheral fatigue and occurs well before the muscle fiber can no longer contract.
- The fatigue increases dyspnea, which in turn creates anxiety, triggering more fatigue and increased breathlessness.
- MS will experience fatigue at one point or another, but fatigue can have many causes.
- Immunological similarities between cancer and chronic fatigue syndrome: the common link to fatigue?
- The conventional method of handling fatigue is based on a maximum fatigue stress.
- Impact Test, Radial Fatigue, and Corner Fatigue before they go in to production.
WEAR vs FATIGUE: QUESTIONS
- Should swimmers wear goggles when learning to swim?
- What kind of shoes do professional ballerinas wear?
- Should Ballet ballerinas wear gender neutral clothes?
- Why should healthcare staff wear hygienic uniforms?
- What do you wear to a wake, and what to wear to a funeral?
- Why do Manchester United wear red and Manchester City wear blue?
- Why do girls wear feminine clothes and boys wear masculine clothes?
- What is the best way to wear sweatpants for casual wear?
- What kind of jeans should you wear for everyday wear?
- Can you wear extended wear contact lenses at night?
- Can probiotic supplementation reduce postswim fatigue?
- Does functional connectivity affect mental fatigue?
- Can natural progesterone rebalance adrenal fatigue?
- Is pre-stroke fatigue associated with fatigue after stroke?
- Is compassion fatigue associated with burnout and compassion fatigue?
- What are the symptoms of dizziness fatigue fatigue loss of balance?
- Is there a correlation between Facit fatigue and modified fatigue severity?
- Is there a unified fatigue life prediction method for metal fatigue?
- How is fatigue strength related to fatigue failure?
- What are fatigue marks and fatigue striations used for?