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Affliction

Affliction is a condition or state of great physical, mental, or emotional suffering. It can refer to a disease, disability, or other hardship that causes distress. The term also functions as a verb meaning to trouble or distress someone or something. Its etymology traces to the Latin afflictio, from affligere "to strike down, to press hard," entering English via Old French affliquer.

In medical contexts, affliction can describe a disease or chronic condition that impairs health, or more broadly

Cultural and religious texts sometimes portray affliction as a test, trial, or divine visitation. In literature,

a
source
of
ongoing
discomfort
or
impairment.
In
everyday
language,
people
may
speak
of
afflictions
such
as
illness,
injury,
mental
health
issues,
or
social
and
economic
hardship.
Afflictions
can
be
acute
or
chronic,
visible
or
invisible,
and
may
require
treatment,
caregiving,
or
adaptation.
affliction
is
used
to
denote
suffering
and
adversity
that
characters
endure
and
either
overcome
or
sustain.
Although
the
term
is
less
common
in
modern
medical
parlance,
affliction
remains
a
general
synonym
for
misery
or
hardship
and
is
often
used
in
the
plural
to
describe
multiple
sources
of
suffering.