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- Dictionarybleak/blēk/
adjective
- 1. (of an area of land) lacking vegetation and exposed to the elements: "a bleak and barren moor" Similar Opposite
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The meaning of BLEAK is exposed and barren and often windswept. How to use bleak in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Bleak.
BLEAK definition: 1. If a place is bleak, it is empty, and not welcoming or attractive: 2. Bleak weather is cold and…. Learn more.
Something that is bleak is gloomy and depressing. If it's raining and dark, you might describe the night as bleak. If you have looked for work and no one will hire you, you could describe your prospects as bleak.
Bleak definition: bare, desolate, and often windswept. See examples of BLEAK used in a sentence.
BLEAK meaning: 1. If a place is bleak, it is empty, and not welcoming or attractive: 2. Bleak weather is cold and…. Learn more.
If someone looks or sounds bleak, they look or sound depressed, as if they have no hope or energy.
1. exposed and barren; desolate. 2. cold and raw. 3. offering little hope or excitement; dismal: a bleak future. [Old English blāc bright, pale; related to Old Norse bleikr white, Old High German bleih pale] ˈbleaklyadv. ˈbleaknessn. bleak. ( bliːk) n.