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Gloom

[ɡluːm] · gloom · English · noun
negativeintensity: mediumsadness

A pervasive low, dark mood or atmosphere.

Definition

A pervasive low, dark mood or atmosphere — and, literally, darkness or a shadowy place.

Connotation & usage

The most “environmental” of the family: it merges literal darkness with a pervasive low mood. Even as emotion it names a diffuse, settling cheerlessness that can hang over a person, a home, or a whole city (a heaviness that descends and lingers) rather than a sharp personal pang — often shared and ambient, where dejection and despondency belong to an individual's spirits. It implies no necessary loss of hope (unlike despair); heavier and darker than the wistful, pensive melancholy.

Senses & usage

The mood

A pervasive low, cheerless mood — often shared and atmospheric.

The emotional sense (1744) is the latest layer of the word.

Literal darkness

Partial or total darkness; a dark, shadowy place (“disappeared into the gloom”).

This darkness sense (first in Milton, 1629) actually predates the mood sense.

Related words

Etymology

1590s, originally Scottish “a sullen look,” probably from the verb gloom “look sullen” (late 14c.), of uncertain origin. Not related to Old English glom “twilight.” Extended from “sullen look” to darkness, then to mood.

How it has changed

A well-documented chain: “a sullen look” (1590s) → “darkness, obscurity” (1629, in Milton) → “melancholy, cheerless heaviness of mind” (1744). The emotional sense is the latest layer. No reliable recent-generation shift.

Sources

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From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.