WORRY vs CARE: NOUN
- An instance or cause of such a feeling.
- The act of worrying or the condition of being worried; persistent mental uneasiness.
- A source of nagging concern or uneasiness.
- The act of worrying or biting and mangling with the teeth; the act of killing by biting and shaking.
- Harassing anxiety, solicitude, or turmoil; perplexity arising from over-anxiety or petty annoyances and cares; trouble: as, it is not work but worry that kills; the worries of housekeeping.
- A state of undue solicitude; a state of disturbance from care and anxiety; vexation; anxiety; fret.
- Something or someone that causes anxiety; a source of unhappiness
- A strong feeling of anxiety
- A cause for feeling concern
- Attention and management implying responsibility for safety
- The work of caring for or attending to someone or something
- Activity involved in maintaining something in good working order
- An anxious feeling
- The state of being cared for by others
- The treatment of those in need (especially as a profession)
- Maintenance, upkeep
- Worry
- Close attention; concern; responsibility
- Grief, sorrow.
- The object of watchful attention or anxiety.
- Attention or heed; caution; regard; heedfulness; watchfulness.
- Charge, oversight, or management, implying responsibility for safety and prosperity.
- A burdensome sense of responsibility; trouble caused by onerous duties; anxiety; concern; solicitude.
- =Syn. Care, Concern, Solicitude, Anxiety. Care is the widest in its range of meaning; it may be with or without feeling, with of without action: as, the care of a garden. In its strongest sense, care is a painful burden of thought, perhaps from a multiplicity and constant pressure of things to be attended to: as, the child was a great care to her. Concern and solicitude are a step higher in intensity. Concern is often a regret for painful facts. Care and concern may represent the object of the thought and feeling; the others represent only the mental state: as, it shall be my chief concern. Solicitude is sometimes tenderer than concern, or is attended with more manifestation of feeling. Anxiety is the strongest of the four words; it is a restless dread of some evil. As compared with solicitude, it is more negative: as, solicitude to obtain preferment, to help a friend; anxiety to avoid an evil. We speak of care for an aged parent, concern for her comfort, solicitude to leave nothing undone for her welfare, anxiety as to the effect of an exposure to cold. (For apprehension and higher degrees of fear, see alarm.)
- An object of concern or watchful regard and attention.
- Charge or oversight, implying concern and endeavor to promote an aim or accomplish a purpose: as, he was under the care of a physician.
- Attention or heed, with a view to safety or protection; a looking to something; caution; regard; watchfulness: as, take care of yourself.
- Judiciousness in avoiding harm or danger
- A concerned or troubled state of mind, as that arising from serious responsibility; worry.
- Concern; solicitude; anxiety; mental disturbance, unrest, or pain caused by the apprehension of evil or the pressure of many burdens.
- Grief; sorrow; affliction; pain; distress.
- Attentive assistance or treatment to those in need.
- Watchful oversight; charge or supervision.
- Upkeep; maintenance.
- Close attention, as in doing something well or avoiding harm.
- Interest, regard, or liking.
- An object or source of worry, attention, or solicitude.
WORRY vs CARE: VERB
- Be on the mind of
- Be worried, concerned, anxious, troubled, or uneasy
- Be concerned with
- Disturb the peace of mind of; afflict with mental agitation or distress
- Touch or rub constantly
- To seize or shake by the throat, especially of a dog or wolf.
- To harass; to irritate or distress.
- To be troubled, to give way to mental anxiety.
- To strangle.
- Lacerate by biting
- Provide care for
- Feel concern or interest
- Be concerned with
- Prefer or wish to do something
- Be in charge of, act on, or dispose of
- To be concerned about, have an interest in.
- To look after.
- To be mindful of.
- Polite or formal way to say want.
WORRY vs CARE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To touch or handle nervously or persistently.
- To touch or handle something nervously or persistently.
- To attempt to deal with something in a persistent or dogged manner.
- To feel uneasy or concerned about something; be troubled. : brood.
- To cause to feel anxious, distressed, or troubled. : trouble.
- To seize with the teeth and bite or tug at repeatedly.
- To seize something with the teeth and bite or tear repeatedly.
- To feel or express undue care and anxiety; to manifest disquietude or pain; to be fretful; to chafe
- To attack roughly and repeatedly; harass.
- To bother or annoy, as with petty complaints.
- To chase and nip at or attack.
- To attempt to deal with in a persistent or repeated manner.
- To be concerned to the degree of.
- To wish; desire.
- To have a wish; be inclined.
- To have a liking or attachment.
- To object or mind.
- To provide needed assistance or watchful supervision.
- To be concerned or interested.
- To be anxious or solicitous; to be concerned; to have regard or interest; -- sometimes followed by an objective of measure.
- To have regard or affection for; to like or love.
WORRY vs CARE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To harass with labor; to fatigue.
- To harass or beset with importunity, or with care an anxiety; to vex; to annoy; to torment; to tease; to fret; to trouble; to plague.
- To harass by pursuit and barking; to attack repeatedly; also, to tear or mangle with the teeth.
- N/A
WORRY vs CARE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- To be unduly anxious and careful; give way to anxiety; be over-solicitous or disquieted about things; borrow trouble; fret.
- To choke; be suffocated, as by something stopping the windpipe.
- Synonyms Pester, Plague, etc. (see tease), disturb, disquiet.
- To tease; trouble; harass with importunity or with care and anxiety; plague; bother; vex; persecute.
- To seize by the throat with the teeth; bite at or tear with the teeth, as dogs when fighting; kill or injure badly by repeated biting, tearing, shaking, etc.: as, a dog that worries sheep; a terrier worries rats.
- To choke; suffocate.
- To fight, as dogs, by seizing and biting at each other; be engaged in biting, shaking, or mangling with the teeth.
- Disturb the peace of mind of
- A source of unhappiness
- (idiom) (not to worry) There is nothing to worry about; there is no need to be concerned.
- To be inclined or disposed; have a desire: often with for.
- To have a liking or regard: with for before the object.
- To be concerned so as to feel or express objection; feel an interest in opposing: chiefly with a negative: as, He says he is coming to see you. I don't care. Will you take something? I don't care if I do.
- To feel grief or sorrow; grieve.
- To be anxious or solicitous; be concerned or interested: commonly with about or for.
WORRY vs CARE: RELATED WORDS
- Fears, Concerned, Fear, Fret, Occupy, Distress, Brood, Interest, Mind, Vexation, Care, Dwell, Headache, Trouble, Concern
- Handle, Charge, Forethought, Manage, Concern, Aid, Precaution, Like, Wish, Attention, Maintenance, Worry, Tending, Upkeep, Guardianship
WORRY vs CARE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Anxiety, Scared, Afraid, Concerned, Fear, Occupy, Distress, Brood, Interest, Mind, Care, Dwell, Headache, Trouble, Concern
- Deal, Fear, Handle, Charge, Forethought, Manage, Concern, Aid, Precaution, Like, Wish, Maintenance, Worry, Upkeep, Guardianship
WORRY vs CARE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Save yourself any worry of paying extra fees.
- First, I think you worry excessively over communism.
- We make buying a used car worry free.
- As you can worry if should contain only.
- You should not worry so much about that.
- Across every generation, parents worry about their kids.
- Learn why Christians do not have to worry.
- The Catholic Church does not worry whether we formally endorse its doctrines, so why should we worry whether it endorses ours?
- Too often we try to fight worry by simply telling ourselves that worry is wrong.
- Siblings in separation have the ability to worry together and worry they will.
- The Medicine Shoppe Long Term Care Operations and Allied Health Care Solutions Inc.
- ACA, COBRA, long term care and health care for people with disabilities.
- Custodial Care: medical care that meets your personal needs.
- LGBT rights, health care, home care, and advance directives.
- How is Home Care Different from Other Care Options?
- This includes the right to choose medical care, to refuse certain care or to stop care altogether.
- This includes policies providing only nursing home care, home health care, community based care, or any combination.
- If these younger care recipients need facility care they are accommodated in special intermediate care facilities.
- However, skilled care and personal care are still care and the type or level of care you may need.
- Managed care offers better care coordination and integration of care, which can address rising health care costs andthe growing population eligible for Medicaid.
WORRY vs CARE: QUESTIONS
- Should commodity investors worry about negative yields?
- Should I worry about premature atrial contractions?
- Should you worry about frequent Permissions repairs?
- Which constipation symptoms should you worry about?
- Should investors worry about Chipotle (CMG) options?
- Should we worry about genetically modified vegetables?
- When does worry become uncontrollable and excessive?
- Should you worry about Lassonde Industries'dividend?
- Should financial marketers worry about gamification?
- Do not worry about tomorrow for tomorrow will worry about itself?
- Will the availability of informal care keep pace with care needs?
- How should we implement transitional care under the Affordable Care Act?
- What is the Care Transitions Intervention in home health care?
- What is person centred care in health and social care?
- How are care management plans shared across the care continuum?
- When does pastoral care mean taking care of the pastor?
- What is B - University family care AHCCCS complete care?
- Why is proactive continence care important in residential care?
- Do celebrities care if you care about their opinions?
- What is the beauty care (nail care) services module?