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2,142 ratings
INFORMAL
pathetically inadequate or unfashionable.
"the show is tongue-in-cheek—anyone who takes it seriously is a bit sad"
3.
(of dough) heavy through having failed to rise.
Phrases
sad to say — unfortunately, regrettably.
"sad to say, science is no longer pure"
Origin
Old English sæd ‘sated, weary’, also ‘weighty, dense’, of Germanic origin; related to Dutch zat and German satt, from an Indo-European root shared by Latin satis ‘enough’. The original meaning was replaced in Middle English by the senses ‘steadfast, firm’ and ‘serious, sober’, and later ‘sorrowful’.
SAD
/sad,ˌɛseɪˈdi:/
abbreviation
noun: SAD
seasonal affective disorder.
Use over time for: sad
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