nyög

Etymology
Of an onomatopoeic (sound-imitative) origin.

Verb

 * 1)  to moan, groan
 * 2)  to suffer from, be saddled with something to be burdened, encumbered with something; to feel the evil/ill effect/s of something
 * 3) * 1789,, A franciaországi változásokra (“On the changes in France”), translated by and :
 * Nemzetek, országok! kik rút kelepcében / Nyögtök a rabságnak kínos kötelében, / S gyászos koporsóba döntő vas-igátok / Nyakatokról eddig le nem rázhatátok;
 * Countries still trapped within the snare of servitude, / Nations that groan in pain, by iron bonds subdued, / Who have not shaken off the collar of the slave, / The yoke that drags you down into your wretched grave,
 * Peoples and nations! in grimmest captivity / Where men groan in chains of hidebound servility, / Where fetters are binding upon the general / And only thrown off for burial or funeral;
 * Peoples and nations! in grimmest captivity / Where men groan in chains of hidebound servility, / Where fetters are binding upon the general / And only thrown off for burial or funeral;