darkish

IPA: dˈɑrkɪʃ

adjective

  • Somewhat dark.
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Examples of "darkish" in Sentences

  • A kind of darkish sort of respectful Johnnie stood without.
  • This may also be seen in artificial light or a darkish room.
  • The BluRay looks pretty great; a darkish and moody film like this benefits greatly.
  • Those are great, darkish fantasy for middle grades, and actually wonderful books to boot.
  • It was still 'darkish' at 6 am this morning, the temperature was 56 degrees, and the sky was brooding and winterish.
  • The room was darkish; the slant of the late afternoon sun made only a small orange rectangle on the dark wood floor.
  • Another possibility is to use additional characters – people who know your darkish protagonist well – to help inform his character.
  • This series, a darkish workplace comedy, was adapted for U.S. audiences from the British show of the same name—which means, as such adaptations always do, that its tone doesn't begin to approach the acid barbarity of the original.
  • All credit, then, to 59E59 Theaters' annual Brits Off Broadway festival for showing us a different side of Mr. Ayckbourn with his own crisp, tidy staging of "Neighbourhood Watch," a darkish comedy about the coming of fascism to a middle-class suburb.
  • Something of the rhapsodic style of the first set of these Strauss songs, not to mention their symphonic piano accompaniments, released a superabundance of energy within Kaufmann, and we discovered new dimensions in his artistry: a long-winded breath control, his openhearted romantic fervor, a darkish head tone, and a kind of pure ecstasy in his delivery.

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synonyms for darkish
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