different between unhappy vs woebegone

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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woebegone

English

Etymology

From Old English w?beg?n (beset by woe), from w? (woe) + beg?n (to beset, to surround). Equivalent to woe +? begone (past participle of bego).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?w??b???n/
  • (US) enPR: w??b?-gôn, IPA(key): /?wo?b???n/, enPR: w??b?-gän, IPA(key): /?wo?b???n/

Adjective

woebegone (comparative more woebegone, superlative most woebegone)

  1. In a deplorable state.
  2. Filled with or deeply affected by woe.

Synonyms

  • (in a deplorable state): dilapidated, derelict, godforsaken, ramshackle, rundown, tumbledown
  • (filled with woe): See Thesaurus:sad or Thesaurus:lamentable

Translations

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