stricken
زدہ
definition
adjective
the pilot landed the stricken aircraft
seriously affected by an undesirable condition or unpleasant feeling.
example
Then in 2001, she was 'stricken' with a yearlong illness and as a consequence lost her job.
So it is in the dog days of August when we are 'stricken' with the feeling that there's nothing new under the sun.
He had a pale, 'stricken' look on his face by the time we reached the school's spacious hall.
He collapsed onto another chair and covered his tear 'stricken' face with his hands.
Seth caught a brief glimpse of her tear 'stricken' face before she ran past him.
Though twice 'stricken' with paralysis, he labored steadily until the fall of 1832.
Unfortunately, she was 'stricken' with typhoid fever the second month in service.
He began perspiring, his hair stood on end, and he was understandably 'stricken' with fear.
Casting one last 'stricken' look at her, he ducked his head and ran towards the door.
When she opened her dark eyes they glistened with unshed tears, round in her pale and 'stricken' face.
Christy looked up at him and gave him such a fear 'stricken' look that he felt powerful.
Years afterward, the same nobleman's son who was saved from the bog was 'stricken' with pneumonia.
Still she saw the 'stricken' look on Ali's face and tears came to her eyes.
The young man looked 'stricken' and alarmed, jumping up quickly to hold out a hand.
With a final 'stricken' look at his uncomprehending face, Olivia steps out into the rain.
The 'stricken' look on his face tells us that the narcissist has no answer and never will.
He tried to protest, but he found that the right of him was 'stricken' with sharp, slicing pain.
Two men 'stricken' with the plague were going from merchant to merchant begging.
Her voice was 'stricken' with sadness, but I could also sense that she was worried.
The young woman paled, her expression 'stricken' as she looked down at his daughter.
Instead, I took one look at your 'stricken' face and ran all the way to Piccadilly Circus.
When my dad was just a boy he was 'stricken' with polio and forced to stay in a hospital for several years.
Suddenly 'stricken' with the urge to reach out and touch him, she did just that.
His face was 'stricken' with age, profound ringlets encircling his deep golden eyes.
He looked as 'stricken' as I felt, remorse and guilt printed subtly on his patrician face.
In the days before her death she deteriorated quickly after being 'stricken' with pneumonia.
The weather was poor, and Henry's army was short of provisions, exhausted, and badly 'stricken' with dysentery.
A 'stricken' look crossed her face, and the danger to her and Bella really struck home.
The pressure of school tests is forcing children 'stricken' with serious infections into school to sit exams.
She glanced over her shoulder, 'stricken' with a new feeling of jealousy.
Credits: Google Translate