Apedia

Dolorous Word Meaning English Causing Pain Sense November

Dolorous describes something that causes, is marked by, or expresses misery or grief.

Doloroso describe algo que causa, está marcado por, o expresa miseria o pena.

Word dolorous
Date November 22, 2006
Type adjective
Syllables DOH-luh-rus
Etymology "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 before slipping from use in the 19th century.
Examples After listening to Charlene's dolorous hard-luck tale, Jonathan was moved to lend her money for hospital bills, rent, and groceries.
Definition : causing, marked by, or expressing misery or grief

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card: Finish garrison riding rode winner november noun ga-ruh-sun-fin-ish

Previous card: Word message image file steganography november noun steg-uh-nah-gruh-fee

Up to card list: Word of the Day