The word for today is…
onerous (adjective):
1: involving, imposing, or constituting a burden : troublesome
2: having legal obligations that outweigh the advantages
Source : Merriam -Webster
Etymology : Onerous rolled into the English language during the 14th century, via Middle French, from the Latin adjective onerosus, “burdensome.” That word, in turn, was hitched to the noun onus, meaning “burden” (source too of our word onus, which usually refers to a burden or responsibility). Onus shares an ancient root with the Sanskrit word anas, meaning “cart.” So although onerous stresses a sense of laboriousness and often figurative heaviness (especially because something is distasteful, e.g. “the onerous task of cleaning up the mess”), it has a deep connection with a literal weight borne by a person, horse, or other beast of burden.
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