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Dreary

Definition: Dreary

Dreary

Adjective

1. Depressing in character or appearance; "drove through dingy streets"; "the dismal prison twilight"- Charles Dickens; "drab old buildings"; "a dreary mining town"; "gloomy tenements"; "sorry routine that follows on the heels of death"- B.A.Williams.

2. Lacking in liveliness or charm or surprise; "her drab personality"; "life was drab compared with the more exciting life style overseas"; "a series of dreary dinner parties".

Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
 

Date "dreary" was first used in popular English literature: sometime before 1200. (references)

Note: Dreary \Drear"y\, adjective. [Comparative Drearier; superlative Dreariest.]. (Websters 1913)


Synonyms: Dreary

Synonyms: dingy (adj), dismal (adj), drab (adj), drear (adj), gloomy (adj), sorry (adj). (additional references)

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Synonyms within Context: Dreary

ContextSynonyms within Context (source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus).

Dejection

Dreary, flat; dull, dull as a beetle, dull as ditchwater; depressing; Verb:

Pain

Distressing; afflicting, afflictive; joyless, cheerless, comfortless; dismal, disheartening; depressing, depressive; dreary, melancholy, grievous, piteous; woeful, rueful, mournful, deplorable, pitiable, lamentable; sad, affecting, touching, pathetic.

Unity

Lone, lonely, lonesome; desolate, dreary. insecable,

Source: adapted from Roget's Thesaurus.

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Crosswords: Dreary

English words defined with "dreary": cheerlessnessdingy, dismal, drab, drear, Drearisome, dull, dungloomysorryuncheerfulness, Unked. (references)
Specialty definitions using "dreary": CoatFieldLydford LawMACROBIANOblivionSeratWinter. (references)

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Modern Usage: Dreary

DomainUsage

Screenplays

Well, in those days mars was a dreary uninhabitable wasteland much like Utah, but unlike Utah mars was eventually made livable. (Futurama; writing credit: Lance Smith; Carl Colpaert)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Commercial Usage: Dreary

DomainTitle

Books

  • A Dreary Story [DOWNLOAD: MICROSOFT READER] (reference)

  • The U.S. Until A.D.2200: Her Story Based on History's Dreary Teachings (reference)

  • Twas a Dark & Dreary Night: A Woman of Her Own PB (reference)

    (more book examples)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Image Slideshow: Dreary

Photos:
Dreary

More pictures...

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Photo Album: Dreary

ThumbnailDescription & Credit

Ah, Mr. Gale, the weather seemed dreary enough until you came!. Credit: Library of Congress.

Source: pictures compiled by the editor from various references; see picture credits.

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Familiar Quotations: Dreary

AuthorQuotation

Author Unknown

When life seems just a dreary grind; and things seem fated to annoy; say something nice to someone else and watch the world light up with joy.

Edith Hamilton

It is not hard work which is dreary; it is superficial work.

George Eliot

What makes life dreary is the want of a motive.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Into each life some rain must fall, some days be dark and dreary.

Michel Eyquem De Montaigne

Dying is a very dull, dreary affair. My advice to you is to have nothing whatever to do with it.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Use in Literature: Dreary

TitleAuthorQuote

A Christmas Carol

Dickens, Charles

It was old enough now, and dreary enough, for nobody lived in it but Scrooge, the other rooms being all let out as offices.

Scarlet Letter

Hawthorne, Nathaniel

When the dreary change was wrought, she extended her hand to Pearl.

Les Miserables

Hugo, Victor

His comrades helped him as they always do in that dreary place, and he escaped.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Non-Fiction Usage: Dreary

SubjectTopicQuote

Lexicography

Devil's Dictionary

OBLIVION, n. The state or condition in which the wicked cease from struggling and the dreary are at rest. Fame's eternal dumping ground. Cold storage for high hopes. A place where ambitious authors meet their works without pride and their betters without envy. A dormitory without an alarm clock.

Source: compiled by the editor from ICON Group International, Inc.; see credits.

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Speeches: Dreary

SpeakerTermPhrase(s)

Thomas Jefferson

1801-1809Let us restore to social intercourse that harmony and affection without which liberty and even life itself are but dreary things.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Usage Frequency: Dreary

"Dreary" is generally used as an adjective (general or positive) -- approximately 100.00% of the time. "Dreary" is used about 272 times out of a sample of 100 million words spoken or written in English. Its rank is based on over 700,000 words used in the English language. Some parts-of-speech are not covered due to the samples used by the British National Corpus. (note: percents less than one-hundredth of one percent have been omitted)
Parts of SpeechPercentUsage per
100 Million Words
Rank in English
Adjective (general or positive)100%27217,812

Source: compiled by the editor from several corpora; see credits.

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Expressions: Dreary

Hyphenated Usage

Beginning with "dreary": dreary-i, dreary-looking.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Frequency of Internet Keywords: Dreary

The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com.
 
ExpressionFrequency
per Day

dreary

19

dreary midnight once upon

7
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Modern Translation: Dreary

Language Translations for "dreary"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses.

Afrikaans

  

onaangenaam (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty), donker (bleak, dark, dim, dismal), afsigtelik (dismal, horrible, nasty), aaklig (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, hideous, horrible, nasty). (various references)

   

Albanian

  

jointeresant (uninteresting), i zymtë (black, cheerless, crepuscular, dark, depressed, dismal, dour, drab, eerie, funeral, funereal, gloomy, glum, grim, heavy, leaden, macabre, mirk, mirthless, morose, mournful, muddy, murk, sad, sepulchral, somber, sombre, spleenful, stark, sulky, sullen, surly, tenebrous, winterly, wintry), i vrarë (casualty, murdered), i trishtuar (blue, cheerless, comfortless, dark, disappointed, disappointing, doleful, down, elegiac, funereal, gloomy, grievous, joyless, lugubrious, melancholy, minor, mirthless, miserable, mopish, mournful, pensive, rueful, sad, tristful, unhappy, vapoury, wailful, wan, wistful, woebegone, woeful, woesome), i pakëndshëm (awkward, bad, disgustful, disgusting, distasteful, grating, hard, ill-favored, ill-favoured, nasty, objectionable, repellent, ugly, unattractive, uncongenial, ungrateful, unlovable, unpalatable, unpleasant, unpresentable, unsightly, warm), i mërzitshëm (annoying, boring, bothersome, corny, dead alive, depressing, dissatisfactory, dry, dull, fatiguing, fierce, pesky, plaguesome, pragmatical, slow, tedious, tiresome, weariful, wearisome, weary). (various references)

   

Arabic 

  

‏كئيب (bleak, blue, cheerless, damp, dark, dejected, depressed, depressing, depressive, desolate, disconsolate, dismal, dispirited, distressful, distressing, doleful, dolorous, down, downcast, down-hearted, drear, droopy, dyspeptic, funeral, funereal, gloomy, glum, gray, grey, grief-stricken, grieved, grievous, heavy-hearted, ill, joyless, leaden, lifeless, low-spirited, melancholic, melancholy, moody, mournful, out of spirits, rueful, sad, saddening, somber, sombre, spiritless, sullen, tearful, weary), ‏ممل (boring, dull, humdrum, irksome, iterative, monotonous, mundane, ponderous, slow, stodgy, tedious, tiresome, troublesome, uninteresting, vapid, weariful, wearisome, weary), ‏حزين (afflicted, cheerless, dejected, depressed, doleful, dolorous, downcast, drear, lamentable, lugubrious, melancholic, miserable, mournful, pathetic, plaintive, rueful, sad, sore, sorrowful, sorry, sullen, unhappy, wailful, weary, wistful, woeful). (various references)

   

Bavarian

  

dung (bleak, dark, dismal). (various references)

   

Chinese 

  

厭倦 , 惨淡. (various references)

   

Czech

  

pustý (bleak, desert, desolate, godforsaken, hollow, stark, void, waste, wild), pošmourný (dull), nudný (boring, dull, humdrum, jejune, prosy, slow, stuffy, tedious, tiresome), neveselý (dismal, gloomy, mirthless), fádní (bloodless, drab, dull, featureless, flat, Gray, grey, humdrum, jejune, tame, tasteless, tiresome), chmurný (dismal, drear, dull, gloomy, Gray, grey, grim), bezútìšný (bleak, cheerless, comfortless, desolate, gaunt, grim, miserable). (various references)

   

Danish

  

mørk (bleak, dark, dim, dismal), bedrøvet (dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad). (various references)

   

Dutch

  

donker (bleak, dark, darkness, dim, dismal, murk, obscure), doods (dead, gaunt), onaangenaam (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty), afschuwelýk (abhorrent, abominable, agonizing, alien, awful, dismal, ghastly, gruesome, hideous, horrible, nasty), afzichtelýk (dismal, horrible, nasty), akelig (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty), bedroefd (dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad), betrokken (concerned, dismal, in question), bewolkt (cloudy, dismal), eenzaam (gaunt, lonely, single, solitary), foeilelýk (dismal, horrible, nasty), mistroostig (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen), afgrýselýk (abhorrent, abominable, agonizing, alien, awful, dismal, ghastly, gruesome, hideous, horrible, nasty), naargeestig (bleak, desolate, dismal, gaunt, gloomy, miserable, mournful, sad, somber, sullen), woest (ferocious, fierce, furious, gaunt, savage, uncultivated, wild), onbeschaafd (uncivilized, uncultured), somber (bleak, dark, desolate, dismal, gaunt, gloomy, miserable, mournful, sad, somber, sullen), treurig (dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad), triest (dismal, sad, sadly), triestig (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen), troosteloos (desolate, dismal, gaunt, gloomy, mournful), uitgestorven (gaunt), verdrietelýk (bleak, deplorable, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty, pitiable, sad), verlaten (abandon, abandoned, alone, desert, forsake, gaunt, leave, only, quit, sole, solitary, uninhabited), vervelend (bleak, boring, bothersome, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty, stodgy, tiresome, weary), wild (ferocious, savage, uncultivated, wild), naar (about, according as, according to, along, as, bleak, by, dismal, for, ghastly, grisly, horrible, ill, long for, nasty, sick, to, toward, towards, untranslated, unwell, yearn). (various references)

   

Esperanto

  

dezerta (gaunt), trista (dismal, sad), senkultura, nekulturita, morna (desolate, dismal, gaunt, gloomy, mournful), melankolia (bleak, dismal, gaunt, melancholy), malserena (dismal), malhela (bleak, dark, dismal), malgaja (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber), malbelega (dismal, horrible, nasty), malagrabla (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty), abomena (dismal, ghastly, hideous, horrible, nasty). (various references)

   

Faeroese

  

dapur (desolate, dismal, gaunt, gloomy, mournful, sad), tyngjandi (desolate, dismal, gaunt, gloomy, mournful), syrgin (dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad), syrgiligur (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen), oyðin (gaunt), illa hýrdur (dismal, sad), óglaður (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen). (various references)

   

Farsi 

  

مایه افسردگی , دلتنگ کننده (Dismal, Stuffy). (various references)

   

Finnish

  

surullinen (dismal, grieved, sad, sorrowful). (various references)

   

French

  

triste (drear), repoussant, morne (drab, drear), affreux (dreadful), abominable. (various references)

   

Frisian

  

drôf (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen), donker (bleak, dark, dismal), ferdrietlik (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen), aaklik (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty), ûnhuerich (dismal, horrible, nasty, quite, very, very much), ûnhuer (dismal, horrible, nasty). (various references)

   

German

  

trostlos (bleak, bleakly, cheerless, comfortless, comfortlessly, desolate, desolately, disconsolate, dismal, dismally, grimly, hopeless, inconsolable, miserable, wretched), düster (black, bleak, cheerless, dark, dim, dingy, dismal, drab, dusky, forbidding, frowning, funereal, funereally, gaunt, gloomily, gloomy, Gray, lugubrious, miserable, morbid, murky, obscure, sad, saturnine, sepulcher, sinister, somber, somberly, sombre, sullen). (various references)

   

Greek 

  

θλιβερόσ (afflictive, bleak, doleful, dolourous, drear, grievous, lugubrious, pathetical, rueful, woeful). (various references)

   

Hebrew 

  

משמים (appalled), משעמם ומ"כא. (various references)

   

Hungarian

  

utálatos (abhorrent, abominable, alien, awful, detestable, dismal, distasteful, execrable, ghastly, groaty, grotty, gruesome, hateful, hideous, horrible, loathful, loathsome, monstrous, nasty, nauseating, obnoxious, odious, poisonous, rank), szomorú (blue, cheerless, disconsolate, dismal, distressed, doleful, down in the mouth, drear, face as long as a fiddle, grievous, heart broken, joyless, long-faced, melancholy, mirthless, mopish, mournful, pained, piteous, pitiable, plaintive, sad, sorrowful, to be in the dumps, tristful), sivár (bald, barren, bleak, desolate, dingy, drear, dusty, gaunt, humdrum, meagre, penurious, sullen), ronda (bloody, disagreeable, dismal, frumpy, horrible, nasty, stinker, ugly), ocsmány (dastardly, dirty, dirty mind, dismal, foul, frumpy, groaty, grotty, hideous, horrible, nasty, squalid). (various references)

   

Icelandic

  

dapur (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen), viðbjóðslegur (dismal, ghastly, hideous, horrible, nasty), hræðilegur (abysmal, dismal, dreadful, ghastly, gruesome, hideous, horrible, nasty, terrible), óþægilegur (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty). (various references)

   

Indonesian

  

suram (bleak, dim, dismal, gloom, grim). (various references)

   

Italian

  

triste (black, bleak, blue, blue-deviled, blue-devilled, cheerless, dark, dejected, disconsolate, dismal, doleful, dull, dusky, gaunt, gloomy, heavy, hipped, lachrymose, miserable, moody, moped, sad, somber, sombre, sorrowful, sorry, sullen, unhappy, wan, woebegone), spiacevole (bleak, disconcerting, dismal, displeasing, embarassing, evil, ghastly, grisly, horrible, invidious, miserable, nasty, regrettable, sticky, uncomfortable, unpleasant), sgradevole (bad, bleak, disagreeable, dismal, distasteful, ghastly, grisly, horrible, invidious, nasty, objectionable, obnoxious, unpalatable, unpleasant, unsavory, unsavoury, unsightly), scuro (black, bleak, dark, dim, dingy, dismal, dull, overcast, somber, sombre, swarthy), schifoso (disgusting, dismal, dreadful, foul, horrible, lousy, nasty, poisonous, revolting, rotten, verminous), mostruoso (abominable, awful, dismal, enormous, hideous, horrible, Mega, monster, monstrous, nasty, rotten, undelightful, vast), buio (black, bleak, dark, darkness, dismal, gloom, gloominess, murkiness, night, somber, somberness, sombre, sombreness), afflitto (bleak, destressed, dismal, gaunt, miserable, mournful, pained, sad, somber, sorrowful, sorrowing, sorry, sullen, unhappy), abominevole (abominable, beastly, dismal, ghastly, hideous, horrible, nasty, nefarious). (various references)

   

Japanese Kanji 

  

落莫たる (desolate, lonesome), 蕭条たる (bleak, lonely), 遣る瀬無い (cheerless, disconsolate, downhearted, helpless, miserable), 遣る瀬ない (cheerless, disconsolate, downhearted, helpless, miserable), '涼たる (desolate), '寥たる (desolate), 索莫たる (bleak, desolate), 索莫 (bleak), 索 たる (bleak, desolate), (bleak), 索寞 (bleak), 殺風景 (tasteless, tastelessness), 侘しい (comfortless, lonely, miserable, shabby, wretched), 佗しい (comfortless, lonely, miserable, shabby, wretched). (various references)

   

Japanese Katakana 

  

しょうじょうたる (bleak, lonely), さくばくたる (bleak, desolate), さくばく (bleak), さっぷうけい (tasteless, tastelessness), "うりょうたる (desolate), わびしい (comfortless, lonely, miserable, shabby, wretched), らくばくたる (desolate, lonesome), やるせない (cheerless, disconsolate, downhearted, helpless, miserable). (various references)

   

Manx

  

dree (boring, drab, dull, humdrum, painful, tedious), bugganeagh (fearful looking, frightening, frightful, puckish). (various references)

   

Norwegian

  

trist (bleak, dismal, drab, dull, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen), ensom (gaunt, immense, lonely, lonesome, remote). (various references)

   

Papiamen

  

desagradabel (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty), tristu (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen), feroso (abysmal, dismal, dreadful, ghastly, gruesome, hideous, horrible, nasty, terrible), feros (abysmal, dismal, dreadful, ghastly, gruesome, hideous, horrible, nasty, terrible), abominabel (abhorrent, abject, abominable, abysmal, alien, awful, disdainful, disgusting, dismal, dreadful, ghastly, gruesome, hideous, horrible, nasty, nauseous, terrible). (various references)

   

Pig Latin

  

earydray

   

Polish

  

smutny (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen). (various references)

   

Portuguese

  

triste (bleak, blue, broken-hearted, cheerless, dark, desolate, dire, disconsolate, dismal, doleful, dumpish, dumpy, gaunt, gloomily, gray, grey, joyless, lonesome, lugubrious, melancholy, mirthless, miserable, misty, moody, mopish, mourning, pained, painful, pensive, piteous, sad, saturnine, somber, sombre, sore, sorrowful, sorry, tearful, tristful, unhappy, upset), sombrio (abstruse, adust, bleak, bowery, cheerless, cloudy, dark, darkling, darksome, dim, dingy, dismal, doleful, dun, dusk, dusky, ebon, funereal, fuscous, gaunt, gloomily, gloomy, glum, grave, hard-headed, lowering, mirk, miserable, misty, morose, murk, murky, obscure, opaque, overcast, sable, sad, saturnine, shadowy, somber, sombre, stygian, umbrageous), melancólico (atrabilious, bleak, blue, cloudy, dark, desolate, dismal, dumpish, gaunt, gloomy, low-spirited, melancholic, melancholy, moody, mopish, morose, mournful, mourning, pensive, sad, somber, sombre). (various references)

   

Romanian

  

trist (bleak, blue, cheerless, dark, darkish, depressing, dispirited, doleful, dolefully, dolorous, downcast, drab, dull, dumpish, elegiac, glum, joyless, lamenting, maudlin, melancholy, miserable, mournful, mournfully, pensive, pensively, rueful, sad, sadly, sorrowful, splenetic, sullen, tough, unfortunate, unhappy, woebegone, woeful), sumbru (black, cloudy, dark, dismal, dull, dusky, fuscous, gloomy, overcast, shadowy, somber, sombre), plictisitor la culme, mohorât (bleak, blue, cheerless, dark, dismal, downcast, dull, dun, gloomy, grave, Gray, grey, lowering, overcast, sad). (various references)

   

Russian 

  

мрачный (black, bleak, cheerless, dark, darksome, dismal, dour, drear, funereal, gaunt, gloomy, glum, grave, grey, grim, heavy, lugubrious, macabre, mirk, morose, mournful, murk, murky, obscure, saturnine, somber, sombre, sullen, tenebrous, woebegone). (various references)

   

Serbo-Croatian

  

dosadan (acerbate, annoying, boring, bothersome, drear, grinding, humdrum, incommodious, long-spun, pain in the neck, pesky, poky, repetitious, slow, stodgy, stuffy, teasing, tedious, tiresome, undiverted, vexatious), turoban (bleak, dour, drear, gloomy, morose, overcast). (various references)

   

Spanish

  

triste (bleak, blue, cheerless, dark, depressing, dismal, doleful, dolorous, drear, gaunt, gloomy, glum, heavy, hipped, joyless, joylessly, mirthless, miserable, mournful, rueful, sad, somber, sorrowful, sorry, sullen, unhappy), lúgubre (bleak, dark, dismal, forbidding, gash, gaunt, ghastly, grisly, horrible, lugubrious, mournful, nasty), horroroso (abhorrent, abominable, agonizing, alien, awful, dismal, dreadful, ghastly, gruesome, harrowing, hideous, horrible, horrid, horrifying, nasty, wicked), horrible (abhorrent, abominable, agonizing, alien, appalling, awful, bleak, dire, direful, dirty, dismal, dread, evil, formidably, foul, frightful, ghastly, grim, grisly, gruesome, hellish, hideous, horrible, horrid, lousy, lurid, moldy, mouldy, nasty, shocking, stinking, terrible, terror, vile, wicked), afligido (afflicted, aggrieved, bereaved, bleak, desolate, dismal, distressed, gaunt, miserable, mournful, pained, sad, somber, sorrowful, sorry, stricken, sullen, troubled), árido (arid, barren, dry, jejune, unfruitful). (various references)

   

Swedish

  

trist (dull, frumpish, gloomy, sad, stodgy, suburban, tiresome), dyster (angry, beetle-browed, black, bleak, blue, cloudy, dark, darksome, disconsolate, dismal, doleful, funereal, gloomy, glum, grave, heavy, humpy, in the doldrums, lugubrious, morose, murky, sad, saturnine, sepulchral). (various references)

   

Tagalog

  

malungkót (bleak, dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, somber, sullen). (various references)

   

Thai

  

เศร้าซึม (in a bad mood). (various references)

   

Turkish

  

sıkıntılı (annoying, constrained, cornered, dismal, distressed, Gray, grey, grueling, gruelling, troubled, troublesome, troublous, uneasy, unrestful, weighty), kederli (broken hearted, chapfallen, dejected, depressed, dismal, doleful, dolorous, drear, heartsick, heartsore, heavy-hearted, low-spirited, mournful, pained, rueful, sick at heart, sorrowful, unhappy, woeful), kasvetli (black, bleak, cheerless, comfortless, depressive, dismal, doleful, drear, funereal, gloomy, grave, howling, lugubrious, melancholy, mopish, muzzy, pitchy, sable, sad, somber, sombre, sullen, tenebrous, waste), iç karartıcı (depressing, drear, gloomy, sad, somber, sombre, sullen), hüzünlü (blue, cheerless, depressing, doleful, downcast, elegiac, funereal, gloomy, glum, melancholic, rueful, sad, somber, sombre, sorrowful), budala (barren, chucklehead, chumpish, clod, clownish, doltish, dullish, fool, jackass, juggins, noddy, noodle, prune, sappy, simple simon, soft, twit, zany), aynasiz (bleak, dismal, ghastly, grisly, horrible, nasty), ahmak (addled, ass, blockhead, boob, bumpkin, cabbagehead, chucklehead, chumpish, clot, country bumpkin, crass, cretin, deadly dull, dimwitted, dolt, doltish, dullish, dumb bell, dunderhead, dunderheaded, fathead, fool, foolish, gander, gawk, gawky, goat, goof, goose, greenhorn, Gubbins, half wit, half-witted, hayseed, idiot, jackass, jerk, josser, kookaburra, light in the head, loon, lummox, lump, muggins, mutt, mutton head, noddy, numskull, prune, pudding-head, sap, saphead, sappy, schlepper, simp, soft, stupid, twerp), acikli (affecting, dismal, gaunt, miserable, moving, sad, touching, tragedy, tragic), ümitsiz (drear, forlorn, frantic, gloomy, gone, hopeless, past cure, past hope, pathetic). (various references)

   

Turkmen 

  

tukat (sad, sorrowful). (various references)

   

Ukrainian

  

сумний (afflictive, baleful, cheerless, comfortless, damp, dark, deplorable, despondent, dismal, doleful, drear, dumpish, dumpy, elegiac, elegiacal, grievous, heavy-hearted, joyless, lamentable, lugubrious, maddening, melancholy, mournful, overcast, plaintive, regrettable, rueful, sad, sorrowful, unhappy, wailful, wan), похмурий (adust, bleak, cheerless, dark, darksome, despondent, disconsolate, dismal, drear, dull, dusky, frowning, gash, gaunt, ghastly, gloomy, glum, grave, gruff, hard-faced, inhospitable, lowering, macabre, mopish, mournful, murk, nightly, obscure, overcast, sable, saturnine, sepulchral, shadowy, stygian, sullen, surly, tenebrous). (various references)

   

Vietnamese 

  

thê lương (drear, gaunt, mournful, stygian), t"i t n (drear, poky, shabby, sorry), bu"n thảm (dismal, drear), ảm đạm (black, drear, dull, howling, mournful, stygian). (various references)

   

Yucatec

  

yah tu yool (dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad), tuukul (dismal, gaunt, miserable, sad, think). (various references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references.

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Ancestral Language Translations: Dreary

LanguagePeriodTranslations
Latin500 BCE-Modern

acidus, amarus, exigua, exigui, exiguo, exiguum. (various references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references.

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Misspellings: Dreary

Misspellings

"Dreary" is suggested in spellcheckers for the following: Crearie, Daraprim, deari, deery, derare, dready, dreay, dreazy, drekar, drery, dreury, droar, Drouard, idriart, treary, triaryl, wreary. (additional references)

Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references).

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Rhyming with "Dreary"

# of Phoneme MatchesPronunciationWord(s) rhyming with "dreary" (pronounced dri"rē)
3-i" r ēbeery, bleary, cheery, deary, eerie, Leary, leery, teary, theory, weary, wiry.

Source: compiled by the editor (additional references); see credits.

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Anagrams: Dreary

Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams

Words within the letters "a-d-e-r-r-y"

-1 letter: darer, deary, deray, derry, drear, dryer, rared, rayed, ready, redry, yarer.

-2 letters: aery, dare, dear, dray, dyer, eyra, rare, read, rear, yard, yare, year.

-3 letters: are, aye, day, dey, dry, dye, ear, era, err, rad, ray, red, rya, rye, yar, yea.

-4 letters: ad, ae, ar, ay, de, ed, er, re, ya, ye.

 Words containing the letters "a-d-e-r-r-y"
 

+1 letter: arrayed, drapery, reynard.

 

+2 letters: deeryard, defrayer, drearily, foreyard, heraldry, hurrayed, martyred, readerly, reynards, wardenry.

 

+3 letters: adversary, comradery, daytrader, deeryards, defrayers, dromedary, drysalter, foreyards, graveyard, graybeard, hyperarid, portrayed, predatory, rehydrate, residuary, resprayed, shadberry.

 

+4 letters: cardplayer, copyreader, daydreamer, daytraders, dehydrator, derogatory, disarrayed, drysalters, drysaltery, gendarmery, graveyards, graybeards, hereditary, keyboarder, lumberyard, martyrized, perdurably, prebendary, preparedly, presidiary, radiometry, rehydrated, rehydrates, rekeyboard, yardmaster.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro.

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Alternative Orthography: Dreary


Hexadecimal (or equivalents, 770AD-1900s) (references)

44 72 65 61 72 79

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519; backwards) (references)

American Sign Language (origins from 1620-1817 in Italy and, especially, France) (references)

=

Semaphore (1791, in France) (references)

Braille (1829, in France) (references)

Morse Code (1836) (references)

-..    .-.    .    .-    .-.    -.--.

Dancing Men (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1903) (references)

Binary Code (1918-1938, probably earlier) (references)

01000100 01110010 01100101 01100001 01110010 01111001

HTML Code (1990) (references)

&#68 &#114 &#101 &#97 &#114 &#121

ISO 10646 (1991-1993) (references)

0044 0072 0065 0061 0072 0079

British Sign Language (Fingerspelling, BSL; 1992, British Deaf Association Dictionary of British Sign Language) (references)

Encryption (beginner's substitution cypher): (references)

388471678491

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INDEX

1. Definition
2. Synonyms
3. Crosswords
4. Usage: Modern
5. Usage: Commercial
6. Images: Slideshow
7. Images: Photo Album
8. Quotations: Familiar
9. Quotations: Fiction
10. Quotations: Non-fiction
11. Quotations: Speeches
12. Usage Frequency
13. Expressions
14. Expressions: Internet
15. Translations: Modern
16. Translations: Ancient
17. Derivations
18. Rhymes
19. Anagrams
20. Orthography
21. Bibliography


  

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