dolour

Signification (Anglais)

  1. (UK, literary, uncountable) Anguish, grief, misery, or sorrow.
  2. (UK, countable) In economics and utilitarianism: a unit of pain used to theoretically weigh people's outcomes.

Concepts

assedics

indemnité de chômage

Opposé de
elation, felicity, happiness, joy, hedon, util, utile, utilon
Traductions

θλίψη

almòina

subsidio de desempleo

subsidio de paro

işsizlik parası

Prononcé comme (IPA)
/ˈdɒlə/
Étymologie (Anglais)

In summary

From Middle English dolour (“physical pain, agony, suffering; painful disease; anguish, grief, misery, sorrow; grieving for sins, contrition; hardship, misery, trouble; cause of grief or suffering, affliction”) [and other forms], from Anglo-Norman dolour, Old French dolour, dolor, dulur (“pain”) (modern French douleur (“pain; distress”)), from Latin dolor (“ache, hurt, pain; anguish, grief, sorrow; anger, indignation, resentment”), from doleō (“to hurt, suffer physical pain; to deplore, grieve, lament”) (ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *delh₁- (“to divide, split”)) + -or (suffix forming third-declension masculine abstract nouns). The English word is a doublet of dol.

Notes

Sign in to write sticky notes