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Dismalness - 3 dictionary results

dis⋅mal

[diz-muhl]
–adjective
1. causing gloom or dejection; gloomy; dreary; cheerless; melancholy: dismal weather.
2. characterized by ineptness or lack of skill, competence, effectiveness, imagination, or interest; pitiful: Our team played a dismal game.
3. Obsolete.
a. disastrous; calamitous.
b. unlucky; sinister.
–noun
4. Southern U.S. a tract of swampy land, usually along the coast.

Origin:
1275–1325; ME dismale unlucky time, dismol day one of two days in each month considered unlucky (hence later taken as adj.) < AF dis mal < ML diēs malī lit., evil days


dis⋅mal⋅ly, adverb
dis⋅mal⋅ness, dis⋅mal⋅i⋅ty, noun


2. hopeless, abysmal, dreadful.


1. cheerful; gay.
dis·mal   (dĭz'məl)   
adj.  
  1. Causing gloom or depression; dreary: dismal weather; took a dismal view of the economy.
  2. Characterized by ineptitude, dullness, or a lack of merit: a dismal book; a dismal performance on the cello.
  3. Obsolete Dreadful; disastrous.
n.  Chiefly South Atlantic U.S. See pocosin. See Regional Note at pocosin.

[Middle English, unlucky days, unlucky, from Anglo-Norman, unlucky days, from Medieval Latin diēs malī : Latin diēs, pl. of diēs, day; see dyeu- in Indo-European roots + Latin malī, pl. of malus, evil; see mel-3 in Indo-European roots.]
dis'mal·ly adv., dis'mal·ness n.

Dismalness

Dis"mal*ness\, n. The quality of being dismal; gloominess.
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