stygian
/'stidʤiən/
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
- Adjective:
- Extremely dark, gloomy, or dismal: This is the primary meaning, describing something profoundly dark, often in a way that feels oppressive or foreboding. It can describe literal darkness or metaphorical gloom.
- Relating to the river Styx in Greek mythology: This is the original, classical meaning. It refers to anything pertaining to the river Styx, which formed the boundary between Earth and the Underworld (Hades) in ancient Greek myths.
Usage Examples
- Adjective (Extremely dark/gloomy):
- The expedition lost its way in the stygian darkness of the cave.
- A stygian mood of despair settled over the city after the news.
- Adjective (Relating to the river Styx):
- In the myth, the ferryman Charon guides souls across the stygian waters.
- The hero's oath was sworn by the stygian river, making it unbreakable.
Advanced Usage
- Stygian is a literary and formal word. It is rarely used in everyday conversation but is powerful in descriptive writing, poetry, or academic texts to evoke a sense of deep, often supernatural or infernal, darkness.
- It can be used metaphorically to describe non-visual concepts, such as moods, thoughts, or periods of time, that are profoundly bleak.
- The country emerged from a stygian period of its history.
- His stygian thoughts offered no hope.
Variants and Related Words
- Stygian is a proper adjective derived from the name "Styx." There are no direct variants (like ), but related classical adjectives include:
- Acheronian (adj): Pertaining to Acheron, another river of the underworld; also meaning profoundly mournful or gloomy.
- Chthonic (adj): Relating to or inhabiting the underworld.
Synonyms
- Dark: The most general synonym.
- Gloomy: Dismally dark; depressing.
- Murky: Dark and gloomy, especially due to mist or haze.
- Tenebrous: Literary term for dark and shadowy.
- Infernal: Hellish; relating to hell (shares the mythological connection).
Antonyms
- Bright: Giving out or reflecting much light.
- Radiant: Sending out light; shining brightly.
- Luminous: Full of or shedding light.
Related Phrases and Idioms
- While there are no common phrasal verbs with "stygian," the word itself is often used in set classical or literary phrases:
- Stygian gloom: A common collocation emphasizing profound darkness.
- Stygian depths: Often used to describe the deepest, darkest parts of something (e.g., the ocean, a forest, despair).
- Stygian blackness: Another frequent pairing to intensify the sense of absolute darkness.
Adjective
- dark and dismal as of the rivers Acheron and Styx in Hades
- in the depths of an Acheronian forest
- upon those roseate lips a Stygian hue-Wordsworth
- hellish
- Hence loathed Melancholy.../In Stygian cave forlorn- Milton