| 释义 | 
		Definition of sombre in English: sombre(US somber) adjective ˈsɒmbəˈsɑmbər 1Dark or dull in colour or tone. (颜色)暗淡的;(语气)低沉的;阴沉的  the night skies were sombre and starless 夜空阴沉,没有星星。 Example sentencesExamples -  The venue is outfitted to reflect the Irish name, done out in sombre colours, offset by wood panelling.
 -  The discreet brown tone of the silk reflects the French taste for somber tones in dress fabrics.
 -  It is a sombre painting with the only bright colour provided by the clergymen's vestments and by the headscarves of the women.
 -  Elements are only very occasionally brightly colored, and more consistently dark and somber.
 -  In the 1980s her paintings generally became calmer in mood and more sombre in colour.
 -  The dark and somber corridors came alive with paintings, pictures, and poetry.
 -  Despite this beautiful and dreamy Titian, the tone continued to be rather sombre.
 -  The period detail has been painstakingly recreated and it is shot in a sombre palette of olive greens and sepia tones.
 -  The Codger pointed to a figure dressed in sombre colours, slightly behind and to the right.
 -  Neutral colours can look too bland and dark colours too sombre.
 -  Striped pants and jackets come in sombre or bold colours, and vertical striped sports shirts in uneven or even patterns.
 -  When she painted in Belgium the colours were sombre with a lot of browns and ochres.
 -  Outside, the sky was muddled with the darkest blues and somber blacks, though it did not look menacing.
 -  Indeed, the whole production is dark in terms of both light levels and the sombre browns and greys of the costuming and set.
 -  The colours lend a brightness to the grey and sombre winter's afternoon.
 -  The room has a musty odour; the furniture looks dark, heavy and somber as if the house resents my presence.
 -  The paintings seem at first to be sombre in tone, coloured mostly by umbers and sepia-like hues.
 -  Her husband, on the other hand, wears sombre tones of deep purple and black.
 -  I hated Father Stone's somber church with its high dark ceilings that shut out the world.
 -  The early drawings are similarly mysterious and brooding, in somber tones of black, gray and brown.
 
 Synonyms dark, dark-coloured, dull, dull-coloured, drab, dingy, shady restrained, subdued, sober, funereal, severe, austere 2Having or conveying a feeling of deep seriousness and sadness.  he looked at her with a sombre expression 他一脸阴沉地看着她。 Example sentencesExamples -  The sombre occasion was further enhanced by the dulcet tones of Winnie Joyce.
 -  In an effort to take some of the beguilement out of her young eyes, I make light of your dark and somber task.
 -  The women look not just somber but grim, their mouths taut, their eyes wary.
 -  But Stewy seemed to take the comment quite seriously, nodding in sombre sympathy as he tuned up his twelve string.
 -  On the subway, commuters wore sombre expressions they would wear on any such Friday.
 -  Despite my sombre and bitter tone, much can be done to improve the relationship between the university and its students.
 -  He wore a gray uniform with a long coat and heavy leather boots and his face wore a stern, somber expression.
 -  This brilliantly written book isn't entirely flippant, since its humour has a more sombre purpose.
 -  The media itself was remarkably restrained and somber in its reporting.
 -  So I hopped out, went out on the veranda and said hello and smiled at everybody, and they were all very sombre and gloomy.
 -  Sharma reported it all in a deep and somber voice, manly but sensitive.
 -  But the counterpart to this enthusiasm was a sombre and deeply serious view of such a life's task.
 -  It was a cold morning as workers gathered for the meeting, a sea of black and grey and dark blue jackets, and the mood was as sombre as the colour of the crowd.
 -  If you haven't yet noticed, this album's tone is relatively somber.
 -  Other writers were equally to popularize the notion of a fundamental watershed, but in tones that encouraged a more sombre mood.
 -  Shimmering waves of washes, glistening tones, and bell accents establish the somber mood.
 -  You could have gone two ways with this thing and been very sombre and serious about this subject.
 -  From the outset this Achilles goes about his bloody work in a distinctly subdued and somber manner.
 -  But you have a sombre, morose side which can mean you going for darker colours and shades.
 -  What's more, the sombre, solemn songs are all the more moving for being used only sparingly.
 
 Synonyms solemn, earnest, serious, grave, sober, unsmiling, poker-faced, stern, grim, dour, humourless, stony-faced gloomy, depressed, sad, melancholy, dismal, doleful, mournful, joyless, cheerless, lugubrious, funereal, sepulchral 
 Derivativesadverb ˈsɒmbəliˈsɑmbərli  Dozens of officers forming a Guard of Honour snapped to attention as the procession, headed by two mounted officers and the solitary drummer, sombrely approached the building. Example sentencesExamples -  Earlier, the marble-effect coffin, decorated with cherubs, was carried sombrely into the church by four pallbearers.
 -  The stained glass windows are of the expected bright colouring and the dark choir stalls sombrely face each other from both sides of the aisle, in the usual manner.
 -  Participants and onlookers stood sombrely as a single cannon shot heralded the silence, which marks the beginning of the armistice on November 11 1918.
 -  Then she went back to the main house and to her bedroom, washed her face, put on a new scarf and attended to dinner efficiently but sombrely.
 
 
 noun ˈsɒmbənəsˈsɑmbərnəs  But in some ways a sombreness has descended that threatens to remove some of the satire. Example sentencesExamples -  You could hear the sombreness of the vast Finnish forests, the determination and endurance of her people, and the ingenuity of its composer in striking degree here.
 -  The Soho streets, their sombreness heightened by the glorious evening sunshine that flooded the near empty pavements on Thursday night, were alive again.
 -  And if the passing of the great man brought a sombreness to the mood, that wasn't lifted by what happened on the pitch.
 -  Not that these symbols will add to the sombreness and serenity of the scene.
 
 
 
 OriginMid 18th century: from French, based on Latin sub 'under' + umbra 'shade'. If you are in a sombre mood you can be thought of as being under a shadow, rather like those cartoons showing a dark cloud hanging over a person's head. The word came into English from French in the middle of the 18th century but was based on Latin sub ‘under’ and umbra ‘shade or shadow’. Sombrero, the broad-brimmed hat, is a Spanish word with a similar origin. See also umbrella 
    Definition of somber in US English: somber(British sombre) adjectiveˈsämbərˈsɑmbər 1Dark or dull in color or tone; gloomy. (颜色)暗淡的;(语气)低沉的;阴沉的  the night skies were somber and starless 夜空阴沉,没有星星。 Example sentencesExamples -  The early drawings are similarly mysterious and brooding, in somber tones of black, gray and brown.
 -  In the 1980s her paintings generally became calmer in mood and more sombre in colour.
 -  Elements are only very occasionally brightly colored, and more consistently dark and somber.
 -  The Codger pointed to a figure dressed in sombre colours, slightly behind and to the right.
 -  The discreet brown tone of the silk reflects the French taste for somber tones in dress fabrics.
 -  Outside, the sky was muddled with the darkest blues and somber blacks, though it did not look menacing.
 -  Neutral colours can look too bland and dark colours too sombre.
 -  The dark and somber corridors came alive with paintings, pictures, and poetry.
 -  It is a sombre painting with the only bright colour provided by the clergymen's vestments and by the headscarves of the women.
 -  The paintings seem at first to be sombre in tone, coloured mostly by umbers and sepia-like hues.
 -  When she painted in Belgium the colours were sombre with a lot of browns and ochres.
 -  The room has a musty odour; the furniture looks dark, heavy and somber as if the house resents my presence.
 -  Despite this beautiful and dreamy Titian, the tone continued to be rather sombre.
 -  Indeed, the whole production is dark in terms of both light levels and the sombre browns and greys of the costuming and set.
 -  Her husband, on the other hand, wears sombre tones of deep purple and black.
 -  The colours lend a brightness to the grey and sombre winter's afternoon.
 -  The period detail has been painstakingly recreated and it is shot in a sombre palette of olive greens and sepia tones.
 -  The venue is outfitted to reflect the Irish name, done out in sombre colours, offset by wood panelling.
 -  Striped pants and jackets come in sombre or bold colours, and vertical striped sports shirts in uneven or even patterns.
 -  I hated Father Stone's somber church with its high dark ceilings that shut out the world.
 
 Synonyms dark, dark-coloured, dull, dull-coloured, drab, dingy, shady - 1.1 Oppressively solemn or sober in mood; grave.
(情绪)忧郁的;严肃的  he looked at her with a somber expression 他一脸阴沉地看着她。 Example sentencesExamples -  It was a cold morning as workers gathered for the meeting, a sea of black and grey and dark blue jackets, and the mood was as sombre as the colour of the crowd.
 -  You could have gone two ways with this thing and been very sombre and serious about this subject.
 -  On the subway, commuters wore sombre expressions they would wear on any such Friday.
 -  So I hopped out, went out on the veranda and said hello and smiled at everybody, and they were all very sombre and gloomy.
 -  In an effort to take some of the beguilement out of her young eyes, I make light of your dark and somber task.
 -  This brilliantly written book isn't entirely flippant, since its humour has a more sombre purpose.
 -  But the counterpart to this enthusiasm was a sombre and deeply serious view of such a life's task.
 -  Other writers were equally to popularize the notion of a fundamental watershed, but in tones that encouraged a more sombre mood.
 -  The women look not just somber but grim, their mouths taut, their eyes wary.
 -  Despite my sombre and bitter tone, much can be done to improve the relationship between the university and its students.
 -  The media itself was remarkably restrained and somber in its reporting.
 -  What's more, the sombre, solemn songs are all the more moving for being used only sparingly.
 -  If you haven't yet noticed, this album's tone is relatively somber.
 -  Sharma reported it all in a deep and somber voice, manly but sensitive.
 -  The sombre occasion was further enhanced by the dulcet tones of Winnie Joyce.
 -  But you have a sombre, morose side which can mean you going for darker colours and shades.
 -  He wore a gray uniform with a long coat and heavy leather boots and his face wore a stern, somber expression.
 -  But Stewy seemed to take the comment quite seriously, nodding in sombre sympathy as he tuned up his twelve string.
 -  Shimmering waves of washes, glistening tones, and bell accents establish the somber mood.
 -  From the outset this Achilles goes about his bloody work in a distinctly subdued and somber manner.
 
 Synonyms solemn, earnest, serious, grave, sober, unsmiling, poker-faced, stern, grim, dour, humourless, stony-faced  
 
 OriginMid 18th century: from French, based on Latin sub ‘under’ + umbra ‘shade’.     |