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A Writer's Dictionary:

dully Definition


Dictionary Home » Words Starting with D » ducat ... dun » dully


dull
adj
    1. Said of colour or light: lacking brightness or clearness.
      Thesaurus: drab, gloomy, sober, sombre, matt, dismal, dark, dingy, dim, dusky, lacklustre; Antonym: bright, colourful, gleaming.
    2. Said of sounds: deep and low; muffled.
    3. Said of weather: cloudy; overcast.
    4. Said of pain: not sharp.
    5. Said of a person: slow to learn or understand.
      Thesaurus: stupid, stolid, sluggish, slow, retarded, backward, dense, obtuse, ignorant, feebleminded; Antonym: witty, intelligent.
    6. Uninteresting; lacking liveliness.
      Thesaurus: monotonous, tedious, prosaic, lacklustre, wearisome, insipid, trite, hackneyed, humdrum, dreary, dismal, boring, vapid; Antonym: exciting, fascinating, exhilarating.
    7. Said of a blade: blunt.
      Thesaurus: blunt, flat; Antonym: sharp, sharpened, keen.
verb
    tr & intr
    dulled, dulling
    1. To make or become dull.
      Thesaurus: fade, obscure, tarnish, sully, cloud, darken; Antonym: brighten.
    2. To make (esp. pain) less sharp.
      Thesaurus: moderate, lessen, subdue, muffle, depress; Antonym: sharpen, stimulate.
Derivative: dullness
noun
    A dull or uninteresting state.
Derivative: dully
adverb
    Etymology: Anglo-Saxon dol stupid.



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