Moody - definition, pronunciation, transcription
Amer.
|ˈmuːdɪ|
Brit.
|ˈmuːdɪ|
noun
- United States tennis player who dominated women's tennis in the 1920s and 1930s (1905-1998)
- United States evangelist (1837-1899)
- United States evangelist (1837-1899)
adjective
- showing a brooding ill humor (syn: dark, dour, glum, morose, saturnine, sour, sullen)
he sat in moody silence
- subject to sharply varying moods (syn: temperamental)Extra examples
I don't know why I get so moody sometimes.
She's a moody woman—she can be happy one minute and angry the next.
The room's moody lighting suggested mystery and romance.
Keith had seemed moody all morning.
Lewis was moody and brilliantly clever.
She was staring moodily into the fire.
He's the same old Peter - moody and irritable.
Word forms
adjective
comparative: moodier
superlative: moodiest
comparative: moodier
superlative: moodiest
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