different between unhappy vs dreary

unhappy

English

Etymology

un- +? happy

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?n?hæpi/
  • Rhymes: -æpi

Adjective

unhappy (comparative unhappier or more unhappy, superlative unhappiest or most unhappy)

  1. Not happy; sad.
    • 1728, John Gay, The Beggar's Opera
      A moment of time may make us unhappy forever.
  2. Not satisfied; unsatisfied.
    An unhappy customer is unlikely to return to your shop.
  3. (chiefly dated) Not lucky; unlucky.
    The doomed lovers must have been born under an unhappy star.
  4. (chiefly dated) Not suitable; unsuitable.
    • 1563, John Foxe, Actes and Monuments
      The people, if they are not strangely bent
      Against our welfare, never will consent
      To this unhappy match, foreboding ill:
      What's it to us, if th' adverse nation will?

Synonyms

  • (not happy): See Thesaurus:sad or Thesaurus:lamentable

Antonyms

  • happy
  • glad
  • delighted
  • exuberant
  • joyous
  • joyful

Translations

Noun

unhappy (plural unhappies)

  1. An individual who is not happy.
    • 1972, The New Yorker (volume 48, part 1, page 109)
      Leduc, as is true of many other unhappies, is largely a confessional writer: her subject is herself, and her gift is a driving, vivacious power that turns her incurable, inveterate unhappiness into a series of dramas []

Middle English

Noun

unhappy

  1. unhap

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dreary

English

Etymology

From Middle English drery, from Old English dr?ori? (sad), from Proto-Germanic *dreuzagaz (bloody), from Proto-Indo-European *d?rews- (to break, break off, crumble), equivalent to drear +? -y. Cognate with Dutch treurig (sad, gloomy), Low German trurig (sad), German traurig (sad, sorrowful, mournful), Old Norse dreyrigr (bloody). Related to Old English dr?or (blood, falling blood), Old English drysmian (to become gloomy).

Pronunciation

  • (General American) IPA(key): /?d???i/
  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?d????i/
  • Rhymes: -???i, -??i

Adjective

dreary (comparative drearier or more dreary, superlative dreariest or most dreary)

  1. Drab; dark, colorless, or cheerless.
    It had rained for three days straight, and the dreary weather dragged the townspeople's spirits down.
    Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary...
  2. (obsolete) Grievous, dire; appalling.

Derived terms

  • drear
  • drearihead
  • drearihood
  • drearily
  • dreariment
  • dreariness
  • drearisome

Translations

Anagrams

  • Ardrey, Drayer, yarder, yarred

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