Melancholie
melancholy
noun mel-an-ko-LEE Rare
Origin: from Greek via Latin: melas (black) + chole (bile)
Usage Note
Melancholie is a pensive, poetic sadness rather than acute grief; it often carries a wistful or even pleasurable quality. Romantics prized it; today it appears in literary, musical, and introspective contexts.
Examples
"Im Herbst befiel ihn stets eine angenehme Melancholie, die ihn zum Schreiben trieb."
Natural Translation
In autumn a pleasant melancholy always came over him, driving him to write.
Literal Translation
In-the autumn seized him always a pleasant melancholy, that him to-the writing drove.
Related Words
- Abgestumpftheit emotional numbness, blunted sensitivity
- Abneigung aversion, dislike, antipathy
- Anmut grace, gracefulness, charm
- Aufgewühltheit emotional turmoil, being churned up
- Bangigkeit anxiety, apprehension, fearful unease
- Bedrängnis distress, straits, predicament
- Bedrömmeltheit stunned, dazed emotional numbness
- Bedrücktheit oppressive heaviness of spirit, dejected low mood
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