Distressing in a sentence as an adjective

But I have heard it barely discussed, which is distressing.

-- Paul Graham#Java is the most distressing thing to happen to computing since MS-DOS.

I won't apologise for it; I find it extremely distressing to have my dick groped by a stranger.

It arises out of this really distressing attitude that every dispute must involve "good guys" and "bad guys.

Toddler will accidentally scroll the containing browser window or switch apps, which is very distressing for them.

That heads rolled because outsiders ignored the skepticism is rather distressing.

But if we're going to reach into the realm of "If X had done Y Aaron would be alive today" then I think it would be distressing to think how many X's there could be.

Which implies something managers may find distressing: There is no silver bullet; a coding team's only salvation is smart coders.

It was extremely distressing, having fictional articles pop up every other day.

Moreover the private party's flippant attitude is really distressing.

I have no idea if that applies to the state of the art of heart surgery in India.------------Among the many distressing things I saw in Nanded, one was the incredible numbers of patients with perforated ulcers.

It was particularly distressing to hear about the payroll tax issues, given that YC has funded excellent companies that specialize in accounting and payroll for small businesses, such as Indinero and Zenpayroll.

In light of this distressing news, allow me to cheer you up with a video of Harry "SuPa" Hong, the Tetris world record holder, maxing out the point score of the NES port of that game to 999,999, starting from the highest selectable difficulty level of 19.

"People don't want to learn how to computer, they want to learn how to get X done" is a great statement, but there's a distressing endpoint to it: if you simply learn how to get X done, instead of the framework for using resources that enable things including X, you become a technician, a cog.

Distressing definitions

adjective

causing distress or worry or anxiety; "distressing (or disturbing) news"; "lived in heroic if something distressful isolation"; "a disturbing amount of crime"; "a revelation that was most perturbing"; "a new and troubling thought"; "in a particularly worrisome predicament"; "a worrying situation"; "a worrying time"

See also: distressful disturbing perturbing troubling worrisome worrying

adjective

bad; unfortunate; "my finances were in a deplorable state"; "a lamentable decision"; "her clothes were in sad shape"; "a sorry state of affairs"

See also: deplorable lamentable pitiful sorry