Filled with melancholy and despondency.
Sinónimos
Examples for "down"
Examples for "down"
1Reading down the list they said, 'Nice', 'Real nice', 'Very nice', 'Nice'.
2However, Evans said the opportunity was simply too good to turn down.
3The deal would, however, create a customs border down the Irish Sea.
4The last Labour government went quite a long way down this road.
5The stock, however, remains down some 30 percent so far this year.
1Health officials say the public health risk has been assessed as low.
2Cases mostly involved young people, with a low proportion of severe cases.
3Conclusions: Consumption of soy products is low in centres in Western Europe.
4Crime is at a 12-year low in Northern Ireland, police said today.
5The extremely low rate of community testing has public health experts worried.
1Semihard; blue; goat; mellow; small; square; a quarter to a half pound.
2A sea of blue state police cars stood motionless ahead of them.
3For example, left hand to blue crimp, right foot to green pinch.
4The sea was quite calm, the sky was so clear and blue.
5The wind blows soft; the sky is blue; the sun shines bright
1It is possible the situation is less grim than it currently appears.
2The Baghdad I left behind five years ago was a grim place.
3Scotland's chief medical officer had another grim message for the public today.
4They bring the grim reality of male violence into our living rooms.
5This was the actual, and often quite grim, reality of the frontier.
1The planet's inhabitants will remain gloomy, however, even despite their new surroundings.
2Chris's own father had reached the gloomy state of mind long ago.
3In general, he had the most gloomy ideas concerning almost all events.
4Rival Spanish hotel chain Melia MEL.MC reported similarly gloomy results last week.
5But it may point to a gloomy long-term outlook for energy prices.
1The great majority of auctions during this period offered extremely depressed securities.
2Surging gasoline prices and soft labor market conditions have depressed consumer spirits.
3Given depressed share prices, many banks are anxious to avoid issuing equity.
4Because at this point they're no longer suffering from a depressed economy.
5After the incident, he became depressed, and required medical treatment, he said.
1The former were excited with delight; the latter were downcast with sorrow.
2Yet this time, to Morgan's surprise, Kingsley did not seem utterly downcast.
3So I went in, but went in slowly and with downcast eyes.
4Others came back in the custody of policemen and with downcast looks.
5Still, you wouldn't say that Nicolas Roeg seems in any way downcast.
1He was quite dispirited, facing the prospect of bankruptcy at that point.
2The Concern Worldwide chief executive does admit to being dispirited at times.
3Where Geertz saw dispirited, tradition-bound irrationality among villagers, Dunham saw potential vitality.
4Ginevra lived her full life in a ball-room; elsewhere she drooped dispirited.
5The very presence of the automaton chilled and dispirited the impatient visitor.
1In that case, I want you not to be downhearted or disappointed.
2Do not be downhearted; it will all come right in the end.
3At any rate, I was too jolly downhearted to court another refusal.
4But he was not a man to become downhearted on that account.
5The door is chained and locked but Peter Tremayne is not downhearted.
1It makes me selfish and low-spirited; for I'm not a bit interesting.
2The cab-driver is low-spirited, and has a solemn sense of his responsibility.
3The prisoners must, if they were genuine Englishmen, have felt rather low-spirited.
4Some of the midshipmen in Dave's section however, felt low-spirited that morning.
5Yet the Master's daughter did not allow herself to become low-spirited.
1He was so down in the mouth that the sentinels noticed it.
2Poor old Jim looks dreadful down in the mouth, don't he, though?'
3The Bay which he laies down in the mouth is imediatelybelowme .
4Of course it makes me a little down in the mouth.
5The old man was rather down in the mouth for him.
6He was very down in the mouth when she suddenly took herself off.
7Nettleship also greeted me warmly, though he looked somewhat down in the mouth.
8I never saw him so down in the mouth this years.'
9Of course he's a little down in the mouth about himself.
10Get round him when he's a little down in the mouth.
11What's the good of complaining if one's down in the mouth?
12He's sitting on his bed with Marco, looking noticeably down in the mouth.
13He was dreadfully down in the mouth when he came back from that visit.
14Enough to make any one feel down in the mouth.
15You are good for nothing as long as you're so down in the mouth.
16You mightn't believe it, but some days I feel away down in the mouth.