Deprimente in english
Depressing
pronunciation: dɪpresɪŋ part of speech: adjective
pronunciation: dɪpresɪŋ part of speech: adjective
In gestures
deprimente = gloomy ; depressing ; dreary ; dispiriting ; dingy ; drearily ; doomy ; cheerless.
Example: In spite of gloomy conditions thoughtful library leaders are saying that opportunities have never been more promising.Example: Since 1963 they have produced their own bibliographic listings with various degrees of efficiency and comprehensiveness but usually with the same depressing tardiness in recording new publications which has so beset the UNDEX listings.Example: The city was considered to be seedy (decayed, littered, grimy, and dreary), crowded, busy, and strongly idiosyncratic (quaint, historic, colorful, and full of 'atmosphere').Example: What is so dispiriting about this painting is that rather than being created in order to be challenging or even inspiring, it's intended only to be comforting.Example: Shortly after he began as director, he moved the library from a dingy Carnegie mausoleum to a downtown department store that had become vacant.Example: Quite apart from anything else, it is drearily boring, the tedium exacerbated by the grating monotony of Stein's voice.Example: It has been so damn dreary in Pittsburgh as of late, raining just about every day with little or no sunshine, so I've been in a very doomy mood.Example: Her work depicts mostly cheerless and melancholic worlds where the main character is in the center of mental conflicts, sometimes euphoric, sometimes psychotic.more:
» de manera deprimente = sombrely [somberly, -USA] .
Example: Focusing on the structure, functions, and finance of this institution, the book somberly traces what its authors see as, in general, a story of decline.» Nombre + deprimente = depressingly + Adjetivo .
Example: There will always be a depressingly high percentage of intransigent parents and arrogant professionals.