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