atormentado
adj.
tormented
atormentar
v.
torment, torture, agonize, persecute
atormentarse
v.
torture oneself, torment oneself
atormentado
adj.
worried
atormentar
v.
torment, torture, persecute, agonize, pester
atormentado
= conscience-stricken, tortured.
Ex: Preventive medicine in the community, for example, is obviously vital, but this is no reason for hospital doctors and nurses to feel conscience-stricken because they wait for patients to come to them.
Ex: The book follows Philip's development from a bashful teenager to a more self-assured, but tortured, adult, and finally to a pathetic old man, who often suffered from long bouts of debilitating depression.
atormentar
= put + Nombre + on the rack, torment, gnaw (at), tantalise [tantalize, -USA], torture.
Ex: The article 'Putting publishers on the rack' discusses the implications for publishers of supermarkets' greater interest in books.
Ex: Modern scholars are tormented by the abundance of electronically transmittable information available.
Ex: The rugby league is increasingly beset by a financial reward system that gnaws at its prime resource -- the players.
Ex: He may have wished to tease and tantalize his readers by insoluble problems.
Ex: They tortured her into revealing her Pin number and safe code before cutting her up and disposing of her in bin liners.