sad

  • 51SAD — ( Single Administrative Document) EU Customs Glossary This is a multi copy form which is used throughout the Community and EFTA countries for the control of imports, exports and goods in transit. EU Customs Glossary Single Administrative Document …

    Financial and business terms

  • 52sad — Synonyms and related words: Quaker colored, abominable, acier, affecting, afflictive, anguished, anxious, arrant, ashen, ashy, atrocious, awful, badly off, base, beastly, beggarly, beneath contempt, beneath one, bitter, blackish, blameworthy,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 53şad — sf., esk., Far. şād Sevimli, neşeli Atasözü, Deyim ve Birleşik Fiiller şad olmak şad etmek …

    Çağatay Osmanlı Sözlük

  • 54sad — [OE] Originally, to feel sad was to feel that one had had ‘enough’. For the word comes ultimately from the same Indo European base that produced English satisfy and saturate. By the time it reached English (via a prehistoric Germanic *sathaz)… …

    The Hutchinson dictionary of word origins

  • 55sad — adjective 1) we felt sad when we left Syn: unhappy, sorrowful, dejected, depressed, downcast, miserable, down, despondent, despairing, disconsolate, desolate, wretched, glum, gloomy, doleful, dismal, melancholy …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 56sad — adjective 1) we felt sad Syn: unhappy, sorrowful, depressed, downcast, miserable, down, despondent, wretched, glum, gloomy, doleful, melancholy, mournful, forlorn, heartbroken; informal blue, down in the mouth …

    Synonyms and antonyms dictionary

  • 57şadənə — sif. İri dənələri olan, iri dənəli. Şadənə noxud. Şadənə buğda. – Bildirçin yediyi adi darı olardı. Arabir şadənə də verərdilər ki, quş qızışsın. H. S …

    Azərbaycan dilinin izahlı lüğəti

  • 58sad — mod. poor; undesirable. □ This is a sad excuse for a car! □ That was a sad pitch there at the end of the last inning. □ This steak is really sad …

    Dictionary of American slang and colloquial expressions

  • 59sad — [OE] Originally, to feel sad was to feel that one had had ‘enough’. For the word comes ultimately from the same Indo European base that produced English satisfy and saturate. By the time it reached English (via a prehistoric Germanic *sathaz)… …

    Word origins

  • 60sad — adjective (sadder; saddest) Etymology: Middle English, from Old English sæd sated; akin to Old High German sat sated, Latin satis enough Date: 13th century 1. a. affected with or expressive of grief or unhappiness ; downcast b. (1) causing or… …

    New Collegiate Dictionary