

political/emotional/economic/religious etc turmoil

○○ noun CONFUSED a state of confusion, excitement, or anxiety political/emotional/economic/religious etc turmoil the prospect of another week of political turmoil in (a) turmoil Ashley gazed at him, her thoughts in turmoil.

Send us feedback.From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English turmoil tur‧moil / ˈtɜːmɔɪl $ ˈtɜːr- / These example sentences are selected automatically from various online news sources to reflect current usage of the word 'turmoil.' Views expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. 2021 In the wake of a week that was full of turmoil, scrutiny, the Las Vegas Raiders prevailed. 2021 Donald Trump was in office for four years, a presidency marked by turmoil, corruption and battles over the truth. 2021 Hundreds of newspapers have folded during the past two decades amid technological and economic turmoil - mostly small weeklies that focused on local issues. officials spent many of their speeches hitting out at the absence of Chinese leader Xi Jinping. 2021 Amid the internal turmoil, Biden and other U.S.

2021 The game industry's constant cycle of layoffs and studio closures-and the turmoil that causes for developers who pinball from position to position-is at the center of Jason Schreier's book Press Reset, which was released earlier this year. 2021 What happens in between consists largely of political wrangling, emotional turmoil, an enormous amount of detail that might elude those without some acquaintance with English history and little of what could legitimately be called drama. 2021 Power struggles, elections, civic turmoil, the ongoing pandemic - the world experienced more than its fair share of each during 2021. Recent Examples on the Web The United States is distracted by internal turmoil, the COVID-19 pandemic, and the risk of collapse of our own democratic institutions.
