verb to yield to superior strength or force or overpowering appeal or desire
Soldiers may succumb to enemy attacks in the battlefield.
Characters in tragic novels often succumb to their fatal flaws.
Individuals may succumb to stress and experience mental health issues.
Patients succumb to their illnesses despite medical interventions.
Some companies succumb to market pressures and go bankrupt.
Athletes may succumb to fatigue during a long competition.
In literature, the protagonist may succumb to their inner demons.
In therapy sessions, patients may succumb to their fears and anxieties.
Patients with terminal illnesses may succumb to their conditions despite medical intervention.
In legal cases, defendants may succumb to the pressure of a guilty verdict.
Companies facing financial difficulties may succumb to bankruptcy.
Structures may succumb to natural disasters if not designed properly.
Students may succumb to distractions and fail to complete their assignments.
Restaurants may succumb to competition and close down.
Researchers may succumb to bias in their experiments, leading to inaccurate results.
Start-up companies may succumb to market pressures and fail to succeed.