Exhaustion
51exhaustion — n 1. weakness, faintness, swoon, faint, Pathol. syncope; feebleness, lassitude, lethargy, inanition; fatigue, weariness, tiredness, prostration, collapse, burnout; debilitation, enervation, enfeeble ment, debility, Pathol. asthenia. 2. depletion …
52exhaustion — ex·haus·tion …
53exhaustion — noun Syn: tiredness, overtiredness, fatigue, weariness …
54exhaustion — [ɪgˈzɔːstʃ(ə)n] noun [U] a feeling of being extremely tired and without energy …
55exhaustion — ex•haus•tion [[t]ɪgˈzɔs tʃən[/t]] n. 1) the act or process of exhausting 2) the state of being exhausted 3) extreme weakness or fatigue 4) cvb the total consumption of something • Etymology: 1640–50 …
56exhaustion — /əgˈzɔstʃən/ (say uhg zawschuhn), /ɛg / (say eg ) noun 1. the act or process of exhausting. 2. the state of being exhausted. 3. extreme weakness or fatigue …
57exhaustion — n. 1 the act or an instance of exhausting; the state of being exhausted. 2 a total loss of strength. 3 the process of establishing a conclusion by eliminating alternatives. Etymology: LL exhaustio (as EXHAUST) …
58exhaustion gap — A gap in prices near the top or bottom of a price move that signals an abrupt turn in the market. Chicago Mercantile Exchange Glossary …
59exhaustion atrophy — atrophy of an endocrine organ from prolonged overwork of it …
60exhaustion of administrative remedies — /agzostyan av sdminsstratav remadiyz/ This doctrine requires that where an administrative remedy is provided by statute, relief must first be sought by exhausting such remedies before the courts will act. McKart v. U. S., 395 U.S. 185, 89 S.Ct.… …