Dusked
[duhsk] /dʌsk/
adjective
1.
tending to darkness; dark.
verb (used with or without object)
2.
to make or become dusk; darken.
/dʌsk/
noun
1.
twilight or the darker part of twilight
2.
(poetic) gloom; shade
adjective
3.
(poetic) shady; gloomy
verb
4.
(poetic) to make or become dark
n.
c.1200, dosk “obscure, to become dark,” perhaps from Old English dox “dark-haired, dark from the absence of light” (cognate with Swedish duska “be misty,” Latin fuscus “dark,” Sanskrit dhusarah “dust-colored;” also cf. Old English dosan “chestnut-brown,” Old High German tusin “pale yellow”) with transposition of -k- and -s-, perhaps via a Northumbrian variant (cf. colloquial ax for ask). But OED notes that “few of our words in -sk are of OE origin.” A color word originally; the sense of “twilight” is recorded from 1620s.
Read Also:
- Duskiness
[duhs-kee] /ˈdʌs ki/ adjective, duskier, duskiest. 1. somewhat dark; having little light; dim; shadowy. 2. having dark skin. 3. of a dark color. 4. gloomy; sad. /ˈdʌskɪ/ adjective duskier, duskiest 1. dark in colour; swarthy or dark-skinned 2. dim adj. 1550s, “somewhat dark,” from dusk + -y (2). Related: Duskiness.
- Dusky
[duhs-kee] /ˈdʌs ki/ adjective, duskier, duskiest. 1. somewhat dark; having little light; dim; shadowy. 2. having dark skin. 3. of a dark color. 4. gloomy; sad. /ˈdʌskɪ/ adjective duskier, duskiest 1. dark in colour; swarthy or dark-skinned 2. dim adj. 1550s, “somewhat dark,” from dusk + -y (2). Related: Duskiness.
- Dusky-grouse
noun 1. .
- Dusky-seaside-sparrow
noun 1. See under . noun 1. a species of sparrow, Ammospiza maritima, existing in two subspecies, one (Cape Sable seaside sparrow) having dark olive-drab plumage with a lighter breast and underbelly, and the other (dusky seaside sparrow) having bold black and white markings on the breast and underbelly: the dusky seaside sparrow is almost […]
- Dusky-shark
noun 1. a blue-gray shark, Carcharinus obscurus, of warm Atlantic and eastern Pacific seas, reaching a length of 12 feet (3.7 meters).