It is especially to be remembered in sphincteral paralyses, so common after long illness in which spinal enervation has played an important role. |
|
All it achieves is presumably the exhaustion of what appears to be an inexhaustible woman and the enervation of her audience. |
|
Rather than passivity and enervation, the goal now is loyalty and mobilization. |
|
The feeling of aimlessness and enervation was alarming, and the resulting imagery memorable. |
|
This starting point corresponds to the feelings of enervation and hopelessness that the current the administration generates. |
|
He was still weak and shaky, but the dreadful enervation and nausea had disappeared. |
|
You can't muscle your way through the enervation and malaise of autoimmunity — if you could, I would have. |
|
But in the interest of their health children should have adequate exercise to offset the physical enervation of this push-button age. |
|
Again, the speaker's anxiety and enervation concern the chasm below. |
|
In any case, the general mood of enervation and ennui was reflected in the day's marquee match in Ashe Stadium, a fourth-round men's singles between Novak Djokovic and Juan Monaco. |
|