different between gloomy vs unmerry
gloomy
English
Etymology
From gloom +? -y.
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /??lu?mi/
- (General American) IPA(key): /??lumi/
- Rhymes: -u?mi
Adjective
gloomy (comparative gloomier, superlative gloomiest)
- Not very illuminated; dim because of darkness, especially when appearing depressing or frightening.
- Synonyms: dusky, dim, clouded; see also Thesaurus:dark
- Suffering from gloom; melancholy; dejected.
- Synonyms: bleak, dreary, miserable; see also Thesaurus:cheerless
Derived terms
- (the) gloomies
Translations
Further reading
- gloomy (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
gloomy From the web:
- what gloomy means
- what gloomy thoughts occur to the narrator
- what gloomy weather
- what's gloomy sunday
- what gloomy face meaning
- what's gloomy in french
- what gloomy mood
- what gloomy means in arabic
unmerry
English
Etymology
From Old English unmyri?e (“unpleasant”), from un- + myri?e (“pleasant”). Surface analysis un- +? merry.
Adjective
unmerry (comparative more unmerry, superlative most unmerry)
- Not merry, the opposite of merry; sad, gloomy.
unmerry From the web:
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