Achy in a sentence as an adjective

Mornings were tough and I was achy and cranky by 11am.

It’s wonderful to walk now and don’t get tired and achy like i used to.

I feel better this way. Being ill and stuck in bed all the time or all my muscles achy is no fun.

Body was mildly achy in the evening near/at bed time.

I sleep through the night with less tossing and turning, and I'm less achy and stiff in the morning.

The initial feeling of being tired, groggy, achy, etc.

Since doing regular practice I don't really get any achy joints.

If anyone reading this has achy joints, bones, muscles, etc, give it a go. There are thousands of videos on Youtube .

It was a very body-achy kind of flu, which afaik is not a covid symptom.

Before she was diagnosed, she had gone to the hospital feeling sick and achy.

I wish I'd known this in my late 20's, when I put on a lot of weight, and was suffering with back pain and other achy bits.

A common side effect of the drug is that it makes you a bit achy and sore, as if you had gone on a long hike the day before.

No slouching, no achy spine, no ending up with nose prints on the screen because I hunch closer instead of using the zoom capabilities.

Being homeless is awful; it will **** you, after years of suffering from hunger, sores, achy joints, dysentery, loneliness, etc.

These exams are supposed to test knowledge, not handwriting/the ability to write for long periods of time without getting achy, or the ability to stay focused on a boring test for over 4 hours; nor do those seem all that onerous on schools.

I'm not disputing real conditions like your wife's, I'm saying some medical conditions these days have symptoms so loosely interpretable by the general public that anyone with achy legs may think they have it, and thus possibly try to medicate it.

Achy definitions

adjective

causing a dull and steady pain; "my aching head"; "her old achy joints"

See also: aching