I suffer from stress freqently. I am susceptible to stress. I react badly to stressful situations. It's not really about grammar, though.
An idiomatic expression would be to keep a cool head To maintain a calm demeanor and think clearly in a difficult, stressful, or troubling situation [The Free Dictionary] Personal Point of View If you are wondering if using idioms in resumes is informal, I have used idioms and phrases while creating my own resume and being in IT, I do review quite a few resumes. I prefer people who can include ...
It looks like "nervous laughter" is an actual term that psychiatrists use to describe the kind of laugh people give when they're put in a stressful situation. There is even an entire article on Wikipedia dedicated specifically to this expression: Unhealthy or "nervous" laughter comes from the throat.
We all face stressful situations, but we do not all respond the same way. How we respond depends on the situation and differences in our biology. A new study from Canada may help us begin to ...
Kitsap Sun: Why your feelings of stress may be causing physical pain
2 "Stressed" and "Stressful" are these two words both adjectives? And what is the difference between the two? In the dictionary it says: stressed - feeling very worried or anxious. stressful - full of or causing stress. If you are worried or anxious, then aren't you full of stress? So do these two sentences mean the same thing? I am very stressed.
0 stressed - adjective - feeling very worried or anxious. stressful - adjective - full of or causing stress. Therefore, stressed has to do with how you feel, and stressful has to do with what you are full of. I am stressful would likely be more correct than I feel stressful, much like one would say The tank is full of gas.