morose
morose — 形容詞
- morosepositive
- more morosecomparative
- most morosesuperlative
1. in an unhappy or angry mood that shows in your silent, unfriendly behavior and e
悶悶不樂
因心情不好而沉默陰沉的
in an unhappy or angry mood that shows in your silent, unfriendly behavior and expression
After losing his job, Tendai became morose and stayed in his room all day.
Tendai 失去工作後變得悶悶不樂,整天待在房間裡不出門。
morose after [negative event] — cause-and-effect pattern
The morose waiter barely spoke to us and set down our plates with a frown.
那名臉色陰沉的服務生幾乎不和我們說話,放下盤子時還皺著眉頭。
Felix's morose mood lifted when his sister brought home a small puppy.
Felix 的悶悶不樂在妹妹帶回一隻小狗後好轉了。
Kasia grew more morose with each unanswered job application she received.
Kasia 每收到一封未獲回覆的求職信就變得更加悶悶不樂。
The children avoided the morose man who sat alone on the park bench.
孩子們會避開那位每天下午獨自坐在公園長椅上的陰沉老人。
- sullen
Emphasizes silent resentment or annoyance more than sadness; often used for a temporary reaction
- gloomy
Broader word that can describe weather or a general atmosphere; less focused on annoyed silence
- glum
Less formal, suggests looking dejected or discouraged without the angry edge of morose
- dour
Suggests a stern, grim seriousness that is part of a person's character, not just a passing mood
文法句型
morose + noun (attributive)
linking verb + morose (predicative)
用法筆記
More common in written or literary contexts than in everyday conversation. The word typically describes a person's lasting mood or fixed expression rather than a temporary feeling of sadness.