A humor that was once believed to be secreted by the kidneys or spleen and to cause sadness and melancholy.
Sinónimos
Examples for "melancholy"
Examples for "melancholy"
1London producer James Mathé's way with melancholy continues to serve him well.
2My eyes are the colour of burned wine; in them lives melancholy.
3Maloof took one last melancholy look at his new ceiling, and left.
4I am; and it is the most melancholy journey I ever attempted.
5The greatness of the affair terrified him; yet its melancholy drew him.
1At that moment it seemed like a living thing, oozing black bile.
2But black bile-thatglistening centerpiece of Galen's physiology-wasnowhere to be found.
3Ajib felt fear and rage churn in his stomach like black bile.
4She has suffered all this till her waters have become waves of black bile.
5Hippocrates thought melancholia was caused by too much black bile.
6Clement, in whom black bile generously flows, works at home.
7The black bile, sourly bitter, rose in Bonasera's throat, overflowed through tightly clenched teeth.
8Now the hymn of Puritanical gloom-the peacemaker with Providence performing devotional exercises in black bile.
9Bidwell's facade cracked and some of his anger and frustration spilled out like black bile.
10She's vomited blood and black bile all over herself.
11All yesterday I was vomiting black bile.
12According to this celebrated theory there are four humors in the body-blood ,phlegm ,yellowbile, and black bile.
13Ancient Romans blamed an excess of " black bile."
14The midwife clamps her mouth over his nose and mouth, sucks and spits black bile on the floor.
16Calvin was bleeding profusely, breathing sporadically, and coughing up lumps of black bile onto the cement beneath his head.
Esta colocación está formada por:
Black bile por variante geográfica
Estados Unidos de América