baleful

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Middle English baleful, balful, baluful, from Old English bealuful, which being equivalent to bealu + -ful. Surface analysis as bale (evil, woe) + -ful. See bale for further etymology.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbeɪl.fəl/

Adjective

baleful (comparative more baleful, superlative most baleful)

  1. Portending evil; ominous.
    • 1873, James Thomson (B.V.), The City of Dreadful Night
      The street-lamps burn amid the baleful glooms,
      Amidst the soundless solitudes immense
      Of ranged mansions dark and still as tombs.
    • 1938, Xavier Herbert, Capricornia, New York: D. Appleton-Century, 1943, Chapter XII, p. 194,
      [] he went off alone with his family, and, watched by the day's red baleful eye, pumped the pump-car homeward, []
    • 1949, Naomi Replansky, “Complaint of the Ignorant Wizard” in Ring Song (published 1952):
      I learned the speech of birds; now every tree
      Screams out to me a baleful prophecy.
  2. Miserable, wretched, distressed, suffering.

Derived terms

Translations


Middle English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Old English bealuful; equivalent to bale + -ful.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˈbaːlful/, /ˈbalful/

Adjective

baleful

  1. evil, horrible, malicious
  2. (rare) dangerous, harmful, injurious
  3. (rare) worthless, petty, lowly

Derived terms

Descendants

References

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