Stygian Meaning in English
word
ˈstɪdʒiən
STIJ-ee-uhn
ˈstɪdʒ.i.ən
STIJ-ee-uhn
Definición
Extremely dark, gloomy, or forbidding; often used to describe something as black as the River Styx in Greek mythology.
Uso & Matices
Formal, literary, or poetic—rare in everyday speech. Often used to evoke a sense of myth, horror, or extremely deep darkness. Collocates with 'darkness', 'abyss', 'night', 'gloom'. Not used for ordinary darkness.
Spanish: estigio - tenebrosoPortuguese (BR): estígio - sombrioPortuguese (PT): estígio - tenebrosoChinese (Simplified): 冥河般的 - 极其黑暗的Chinese (Traditional): 冥河般的 - 極其黑暗的Hindi: भयानक अंधकारमय - स्टिजियनArabic: ستيجان - مظلم جداًBengali: স্তিগীয় - অতি অন্ধকার (কাব্যিক)Russian: стигийский - мрачно-преисподнийJapanese: スティジアン - 冥界のように暗いVietnamese: tăm tối tuyệt đối - tối như địa ngụcKorean: 스티지언 - 지옥같이 어두운Turkish: stygian - zifiri karanlık (edebi)Urdu: اسٹائیجین - انتہائی سیاہ (ادبی)Indonesian: stygian - tối tăm như địa ngục
Oraciones de Ejemplo
The cave was filled with stygian darkness.
basic
The stygian silence made everyone uneasy.
basic
The night was stygian, with no stars in the sky.
basic
His thoughts wandered through stygian memories he wished to forget.
natural
The power outage left them in a stygian world, searching for candles.
natural
Walking home that night, the alley felt almost stygian in its darkness.
natural