Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. I'm in a bit of a predicament because I've accidentally accepted two invitations to dinner on the same night. Synonyms. mess (PROBLEMS) plight. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Difficult situations and unpleasant experiences. a hard/tough row to hoe idiom. abyss. adversity. at your worst idiom. Augean. bad hair day. epidemic.

    • English (US)

      PREDICAMENT meaning: 1. an unpleasant situation that is...

  3. a difficult or unpleasant situation, especially one where it is difficult to know what to do synonym quandary the club's financial predicament I'm in a terrible predicament.

  4. Google's service, offered free of charge, instantly translates words, phrases, and web pages between English and over 100 other languages.

  5. Definition of is in a predicament It means that he's very prideful, in a bad way. He loves himself to the point where it's a problem and somewhat rude. Like, an "I'm the best at everything all the time" attitude. :)|It means you have a problem. |@laryalmeidah: No problem!

  6. (prɪdɪkəmənt ) Word forms: predicaments. countable noun. If you are in a predicament, you are in an unpleasant situation that is difficult to get out of. Hank explained our predicament. The decision will leave her in a peculiar predicament. Synonyms: fix [informal], state, situation, spot [informal] More Synonyms of predicament.

  7. If you are in a predicament, you are in an unpleasant situation that is difficult to get out of. [...] More. Synonyms of 'predicament' • fix (informal), state, situation, spot (informal) [...] More. Collocations with the word 'predicament' current predicament face a predicament present predicament More. Examples of 'predicament' in a sentence.

  8. noun. /prɪˈdɪkəmənt/ a difficult or an unpleasant situation, especially one where it is difficult to know what to do synonym quandary. the club’s financial predicament. I'm in a terrible predicament. Extra Examples. Oxford Collocations Dictionary. Word Origin late Middle English (in Aristotelian logic): from late Latin ‘make known’.