malaise

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
9
Words With Friends
11
Letters
7
Pronunciation
/məˈleɪz/
See all 4 pronunciations
/məˈleɪz/ · /mæˈleɪz/ · /mɑˈleɪz/ · /-ˈlɛz/

Definition of malaise

3 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)A feeling of general bodily discomfort, fatigue or unpleasantness, often at the onset of illness.
    “Addressing tech malaise has become a trend with authors and self-help coaches – such as Catherine Price, author of How to Break Up With Your Phone, who, during a $295, 50-minute phone call, will offer you advice on things like how to create roadblocks to checking your phone by putting a rubber band around your screen, and “think of the bigger picture” rather than what you’re missing on Twitter.”
    “Volkswagen’s travails are symbolic of the nation’s overall economic malaise and a political crisis that collapsed the government in December, paving the way for early elections Feb. 23.”
    “The Euston Rush hit the headlines last year. It also became synonymous with a lack of respect for passengers, a disregard for planning in stations, and a general malaise in the rail industry.”
See all 3 definitions

noun

  1. (countable, uncountable)A feeling of general bodily discomfort, fatigue or unpleasantness, often at the onset of illness.
    “Addressing tech malaise has become a trend with authors and self-help coaches – such as Catherine Price, author of How to Break Up With Your Phone, who, during a $295, 50-minute phone call, will offer you advice on things like how to create roadblocks to checking your phone by putting a rubber band around your screen, and “think of the bigger picture” rather than what you’re missing on Twitter.”
    “Volkswagen’s travails are symbolic of the nation’s overall economic malaise and a political crisis that collapsed the government in December, paving the way for early elections Feb. 23.”
    “The Euston Rush hit the headlines last year. It also became synonymous with a lack of respect for passengers, a disregard for planning in stations, and a general malaise in the rail industry.”
  2. (countable, uncountable)An ambiguous feeling of mental or moral depression.
    “Their failure helped produce the widespread malaise reported by Thucydides: the Athenians "grieved over their private sufferings, the common people because, having started out with less, they were deprived even of that; the rich had lost their beautiful estates in the country, the houses as well as their expensive furnishings, but worst of all, they had war instead of peace" (2.65.2).”
  3. (countable, uncountable)Ill will or hurtful feelings for others or someone.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From French malaise (“ill ease”), from mal- (“bad, badly”) + aise (“ease”). Compare ill at ease.

Anagrams of malaise

3 plays · some not in Scrabble

Words you can make from malaise

122 playable · top: EMAILS (8 pts)

Best play emails 8 points

6-letter words

6 words

5-letter words

20 words

4-letter words

47 words

3-letter words

32 words

2-letter words

16 words

Hooks

1 extension · 1 back

A single letter you can add to malaise to make another valid word.

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