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dolorous

dolorous

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day · Merriam-Webster

June 19, 20162m 16s

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Show Notes

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for June 19, 2016 is: dolorous • \DOH-luh-rus\  • adjective : causing, marked by, or expressing misery or grief Examples: With his dolorous songs about hard-bitten people down on their luck, Johnny Cash garnered legions of fans across generations. "I felt myself sinking now and then into a dolorous state in which I allowed myself to succumb to a deep despair about life here…." — Alan Cheuse, Song of Slaves in the Desert, 2011 Did you know? "No medicine may prevail … till the same dolorous tooth be … plucked up by the roots." When dolorous first appeared around 1400, it was linked to physical pain—and appropriately so, since the word is a descendant of the Latin word dolor, meaning "pain" as well as "grief." (Today, dolor is also an English word meaning "sorrow.") When the British surgeon John Banister wrote the above quotation in 1578, dolorous could mean either "causing pain" or "distressful, sorrowful." "The death of the earl [was] dolorous to all Englishmen," the English historian Edward Hall had written a few decades earlier. The "causing pain" sense of dolorous coexisted with the "sorrowful" sense for centuries, but nowadays its use is rare. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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merriamword a daymerriam-websterdictionaryword of the dayenglishwordwebsterwordslanguagevocabulary