(Usually used colloquially) causing or accompanied by misfortune.
1I mean, there always seems to be something, but I don't feel jinxed.
2And a swamp of thaumaturgically jinxed mud that degenerates his boots into worms.
3The southern tip of Manhattan has always been jinxed as a place of habitation.
4Now that I'm alone, with no purpose left but saving myself, everything is jinxed.
5James had the distinct impression that Willow had jinxed Fiera with a carefully concealed wand.
6Many of the books are charmed, others are jinxed.
7A jinxed ship shouldn't go to the Bermuda Triangle.
8They were saying that the place is jinxed.
9He didn't want to be the one who jinxed the operation, because he'd been there before.
10But from the beginning, the match was jinxed.
11NCH, Dublin RTÉ Symphony Orchestra had all the advance appearance of a concert that was jinxed.
12What rotten luck, man, I must be jinxed.
13Injury-jinxed Leinster will need to rediscover their 2003 form to stand a chance at a packed Ravenhill.
14Manchester United fans must be beginning to think their hopes of ever repeating 1999's treble are jinxed.
15I have a concern that I may now have jinxed it by drawing attention to its longevity.
16But I knew I had jinxed it.
Sobre este termo
jinxed
jinx Verbo
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