List of synonyms from "atone" to synonyms from "attaint"
Discover all the synonyms available for the terms atone, atrabilious, attachment, attach, atrocious, attaché and many more. Click on one of the words below and go directly to the synonyms associated with it.
Definition of the day : « atrabilious »
- As in bad-tempered : adj perversely irritable
- As in dejected : adj depressed, blue
- After his conversion he made amends, though he was always the atrabilious faultfinder.
- Extract from : « Unicorns » by James Huneker
- Much dining-out doth breed dyspepsia, and atrabilious views are apt to be a leetle lop-sided.
- Extract from : « Punch, or the London Charivari Volume 98, January 4, 1890 » by Various
- I hold them to be a race of pessimists, recruited amongst beggarly philosophers and knavish, atrabilious theologians.
- Extract from : « The Memoires of Casanova, Complete » by Jacques Casanova de Seingalt
- The melancholy or atrabilious temperament is of a different character.
- Extract from : « Curiosities of Medical Experience » by J. G. (John Gideon) Millingen
- It was his wife, Petronille, still young and passing handsome, but of atrabilious and harsh mien.
- Extract from : « The Iron Trevet or Jocelyn the Champion » by Eugne Sue
- He now sees what a regard they have for the health of the atrabilious South Americans.
- Extract from : « Memoirs of Service Afloat, During the War Between the States » by Raphael Semmes
- A plaintive hail from the rough brick coping of the bund drew his atrabilious attention.
- Extract from : « Cursed » by George Allan England
- The country has its eye on that knot of atrabilious Liberals whose voice is that of Jacob, but whose hands are the hands of Esau.
- Extract from : « British Quarterly Review, American Edition, Volume LIV » by Various
- His appreciation of men, their character, their talents, their designs—all bear the hue of the atrabilious journalist.
- Extract from : « Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 56, Number 347, September, 1844 » by Various
- An atrabilious monk in his garret vented his spleen with more than usual acrimony, and the world applauded.
- Extract from : « Renaissance in Italy: Italian Literature » by John Addington Symonds