0 having a lot of trouble with something, or having to deal with a lot of something that causes problems: --
Several novels deal with the turbulent dramas besetting the corporate corridors of phonographic power: the studios and boardrooms, where careers are forged or destroyed.
The prominences are beset with small tubercles, and are marked off into three more or less equal portions by two shallow furrows.
Cross-national comparisons of partisan identification are beset by conceptual and methodological difficulties.
The third period (1946-1974), while beset with difficulties, continued the development started in the second period and made some new innovations, especially in poetry.
However, they found a science that has been beset by doubt ever since the eye of prophecy lost its luster.
Klatch shows that conservatives as well as leftists were radicalised by their experiences, and that both organisations were beset by factionalism.
Unfortunately, the following major difficulties beset this proposal.
It is also beset by differences between its members about how to handle problems like unemployment.