1590s, originally Scottish, "a sullen look," probably from gloom (v.) "look sullen or displeased" (late 14c., gloumen), of unknown origin; perhaps from an unrecorded Old English verb or from a Scandinavian source (compare Norwegian dialectal glome "to stare somberly"), or from Middle Low German glum "turbid," Dutch gluren "to leer." Not considered to be related to Old English glom "twilight" (see gloaming).
Sense of "darkness, obscurity" is first recorded 1629 in Milton's poetry; that of "melancholy, dejection, cloudiness or cheerless heaviness of mind" is from 1744; but gloomy with a corresponding sense is attested from 1580s.
雙語(yǔ)例句
1. Ellery's return will help to chase away some of the gloom.
埃勒里的歸來(lái)可以驅(qū)散一些抑郁的情緒。
來(lái)自柯林斯例句
2. The economic gloom of the early 1980s was relieved by fanciful architecture.