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countable and uncountable, plural hardships
Difficulty or trouble; hard times. quotations examples
If train services of this kind were to be cut off, without any provision of alternative services, there would, of course, be hardship in some cases.
1962 December, “Dr. Beeching previews the plan for British Railways”, in Modern Railways, page 377
The TUCC's role was to assess what (if any) hardship a BR closure proposal would cause, and to make recommendations to ministers who would have the final say.
2020 May 20, Philip Haigh, “Ribblehead: at the heart of the S&C's survival and its revival”, in Rail, page 26
A burden, a source of difficulty that could impose a barrier. examples
third-person singular simple present hardships, present participle hardshipping, simple past and past participle hardshipped
(transitive) To treat (a person) badly; to subject to hardships. quotations examples
[…] an adjustment of the income tax could easily produce the twenty millions without hardshipping any industrious person in the community […]
1969, Tract Series, numbers 96-129, page 529
Although we lost the election by the narrowest of margins, the people of Oregon heard a great deal about education, and particularly about how "look-say" reading instruction was hardshipping Oregon school children.
1970, Reading Reform Foundation, The Annual Reading Reform Foundation Conference, page 47