gruesome
adjective
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L337197 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /ˈɡɹuːsəm/ / /ˈɡɹuːsm̩/ / /ˈɡɹusəm/
adj
Etymology: From grue (“(archaic except Northern England, Scotland) to be frightened; to shudder with fear”) + -some (suffix meaning ‘characterized by some specific condition or quality, usually to a considerable degree’ forming adjectives and nouns), probably popularized by the Scottish novelist and poet Walter Scott (1771–1832): see, for example, the 1816 quotation. cognates * Danish grusom (“cruel; horrible”) * Middle Dutch grousaem, grusaem (modern Dutch gruwzaam (“cruel; gruesome”)) * Middle High German grûsam, grûwesam (modern German grausam (“cruel”)) * Norwegian Bokmål grusom (“cruel; horrible”)
- Repellently frightful and shocking; ghastly, horrific.
“He taks a ſvvirlie, auld moſs-oak, / For ſome black, grouſome Carlin; […]”
“There's a wheen German horse doun at Glasgow yonder; they ca' their commander Wittybody, or some sic name, though he's as grave and grewsome an auld Dutchman as e'er I saw.”
- Awful, terrible.
“The team was so unprepared that the way it played was just gruesome.”
- Of a person: filled with fear; afraid, fearful.
“Then says I to myself,—"John Ridd, these trees, and pools, and lonesome rocks, and setting of the sunlight, are making a gruesome coward of thee. Shall I go back to my mother so, and be called her fearless boy?"”
“Some of his [Nathaniel Hawthorne's] companions, either then or afterwards, took, I believe, rather a gruesome view of his want of articulate enthusiasm, and accused him of coming to the place as a sort of intellectual vampire, for purely psychological purposes.”