Definitionadj. suggesting an unhealthy mental state
Last update: December 10, 2015
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She seems to be morbid. [adverb]
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Doreen showed up now and then and would get morbid about Denver midway through her second drink. [adjective]
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With a morbid fascination, people flocked to Kirkwall from outer areas to catch a glimpse of the devastation. [adjective]
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Those ideas are morbid, like the ravings of a man in a fever. [adjective]
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"No," replied her conductor, "unless a morbid and excessive sensibility on such a subject can be termed insanity." [adjective]
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It is unchildlike and morbid to an unusual degree and very difficult to cure. [adjective]
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Of course such feelings, in themselves morbid, are not to be trusted. [adjective]
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Is the movement of the Russian people eastward to Kazan and Siberia expressed by details of the morbid character of Ivan the Terrible and by his correspondence with Kurbski. [adjective]
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A terrible fear was upon her,the fear of the world beyond the bayou, the morbid and insane dread she had been under since childhood. [adjective]
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