BACKBREAKING


Meaning of BACKBREAKING in English

back ‧ break ‧ ing /ˈbækbreɪkɪŋ/ BrE AmE adjective

backbreaking work is physically difficult and makes you very tired

• • •

THESAURUS

▪ tiring making you feel that you want to sleep or rest:

The journey was really tiring.

|

I’ve had such a tiring day.

|

It was tiring work.

▪ exhausting extremely tiring:

I had to drive nine hours without a break – it was exhausting.

|

an exhausting week of singing, acting, and dancing

▪ hard very tiring and difficult – used about days, journeys etc:

a hard day at work

|

The last part of the journey was very hard.

▪ wearing /ˈweərɪŋ $ ˈwer-/ tiring because you have to use a lot of your mental energy, and often become bored – used about people, situations etc:

I find her constant questions rather wearing.

|

Kids of that age can be very wearing.

|

His films always tend to have the same plots, which does get rather wearing after a while.

▪ gruelling British English , grueling American English ( also punishing ) very tiring physically or mentally – used when you have to keep doing something for a long time:

a gruelling journey across the desert

|

a gruelling race

|

a punishing schedule

|

a punishing exercise regime

▪ backbreaking backbreaking work is extremely tiring and needs a lot of physical effort:

Clearing the land was slow backbreaking work.

|

Laborers were paid $2 a day for backbreaking farm work.

▪ something is a killer informal used when saying that something is extremely tiring:

Today was a real killer.

▪ fatiguing formal making you feel very tired:

Factory work was repetitive and fatiguing.

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.