Stricken in a sentence as an adjective

In fact if you look at Amazon's finances you are stricken at how little profit they make.

> an askCan this new idiom be stricken from our collective lexicon?

He closes the essay with "As our second midnight approaches, will the plight of famine-stricken peasants gradually spread to engulf us all?

Sometimes days went by without hearing from anyone, while I was fear-stricken, totally disoriented, and angry.

In particular, his effort to make water purification machines for poverty-stricken areas is likely to have more health impact than anything currently doable.

Is anybody else stricken by the fact that the email seems to be too much like a boilerplate support email, providing little useful information and offering no real information about the next steps?

Nearly everyone I know in Pakistan has voted for PTI, but through a combination of election rigging and a mass of poverty-stricken people being coerced into voting for the wrong guy resulted in the status quo being maintained.

You don't see how flying in a rich westerner into some poverty-stricken region of the developing world to carry out an endangered wild big-game trophy hunt might be more controversial than killing an animal farmed for food for its intended purpose?

> Cockpit component company Rockwell Collins, for example, made waves at this years Paris air show when it talked about developing a panic button for commercial airplanes that would give confused and stricken pilots the option of flipping a switch and letting the computer fly the plane to safety.

Gabriele seems to believe or hope that the masses will see his "repost" of his own app and be stricken by the desire to do the ethically right thing and uninstall all of the rushed clones and install the legitimate version and play it with all the fervor and excitement as if the global 2048 hype still currently existed.

Stricken definitions

adjective

grievously affected especially by disease

See also: afflicted

adjective

(used in combination) affected by something overwhelming; "conscience-smitten"; "awe-struck"

See also: smitten struck

adjective

put out of action (by illness)