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restlessness
[ rest-lis-nis ]
noun
- the inability to remain still or at rest, or a mood characterized by this:
To overcome younger students’ restlessness and anxiety, one expert suggests class routines, role play activities, and other calming exercises.
- the fact of being unable to sleep or find a comfortable position in which to sleep:
I haven't been sleeping so well lately—a mix of restlessness and staying up too late watching movies.
- discontent or dissatisfaction that drives one to keep looking for solutions, alternatives, or new things:
We are incomplete beings yearning to be made whole, dogged by a sense of unease and restlessness.
- perpetual movement:
Growing up on the coast of Sydney as he did, his music is influenced by the restlessness of the ocean.
Word History and Origins
Origin of restlessness1
Example Sentences
Yet through all the retirements and the restlessness, the rejections and the reincarnations, Parker has always managed to land on his feet.
Didion, who spent a short time during her childhood on Army bases with her enlisted father, watched movies to fend off her restlessness.
On the other, "she had the restlessness of an idealist with a certain anger at the world as it was", Eve, now 67, told the BBC.
The restlessness and anger in the Arab world were nearing a breaking point that would erupt months later.
There was no restlessness from the world's media in attendance.
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