bleak /ˈblik/
(a.)蕭瑟的,蒼白的,荒涼的,陰冷的
Bleak a.
1. Without color; pale; pallid. [Obs.]
When she came out she looked as pale and as bleak as one that were laid out dead. --Foxe.
2. Desolate and exposed; swept by cold winds.
Wastes too bleak to rear
The common growth of earth, the foodful ear. --Wordsworth.
At daybreak, on the bleak sea beach. --Longfellow.
3. Cold and cutting; cheerless; as, a bleak blast.
-- Bleak*ish, a. -- Bleak*ly, adv. -- Bleak*ness, n.
Bleak, n. Zool. A small European river fish (Leuciscus alburnus), of the family Cyprinidæ; the blay. [Written also blick.]
Note: ☞ The silvery pigment lining the scales of the bleak is used in the manufacture of artificial pearls.
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bleak
adj 1: offering little or no hope; "the future looked black";
"prospects were bleak"; "Life in the Aran Islands has
always been bleak and difficult"- J.M.Synge; "took a
dim view of things" [syn: black, dim]
2: providing no shelter or sustenance; "bare rocky hills";
"barren lands"; "the bleak treeless regions of the high
Andes"; "the desolate surface of the moon"; "a stark
landscape" [syn: bare, barren, desolate, stark]
3: unpleasantly cold and damp; "bleak winds of the North
Atlantic" [syn: cutting, raw]