dismal

[ diz-muhl ]
/ ˈdɪz məl /

adjective

causing gloom or dejection; gloomy; dreary; cheerless; melancholy: dismal weather.
characterized by ineptness or lack of skill, competence, effectiveness, imagination, or interest; pitiful: Our team played a dismal game.
Obsolete.
  1. disastrous; calamitous.
  2. unlucky; sinister.

noun

Southern U.S. a tract of swampy land, usually along the coast.

Origin of dismal

1275–1325; Middle English dismale unlucky time, dismol day one of two days in each month considered unlucky (hence later taken as adj.) < Anglo-French dis mal < Medieval Latin diēs malī literally, evil days

OTHER WORDS FROM dismal

dis·mal·ly, adverb dis·mal·ness, dis·mal·i·ty, noun

Example sentences from the Web for dismally

British Dictionary definitions for dismally

dismal
/ (ˈdɪzməl) /

adjective

causing gloom or depression
causing dismay or terror
of poor quality or a low standard; feeble

Derived forms of dismal

dismally, adverb dismalness, noun

Word Origin for dismal

C13: from dismal (noun) list of 24 unlucky days in the year, from Medieval Latin diēs malī bad days, from Latin diēs day + malus bad