grim
英 [grɪm]
美[ɡrɪm]
	    - adj. 冷酷的;糟糕的;残忍的
 - n. (Grim)人名;(英、德、俄、捷、匈)格里姆
 
英英释意
- 1. not to be placated or appeased or moved by entreaty;
 - "grim determination"
 - "grim necessity"
 - "Russia's final hour, it seemed, approached with inexorable certainty"
 - "relentless persecution"
 - "the stern demands of parenthood"
 
- 2. shockingly repellent; inspiring horror;
 - "ghastly wounds"
 - "the grim aftermath of the bombing"
 - "the grim task of burying the victims"
 - "a grisly murder"
 - "gruesome evidence of human sacrifice"
 - "macabre tales of war and plague in the Middle ages"
 - "macabre tortures conceived by madmen"
 
- 3. harshly ironic or sinister;
 - "black humor"
 - "a grim joke"
 - "grim laughter"
 - "fun ranging from slapstick clowning ... to savage mordant wit"
 
- 4. causing dejection;
 - "a blue day"
 - "the dark days of the war"
 - "a week of rainy depressing weather"
 - "a disconsolate winter landscape"
 - "the first dismal dispiriting days of November"
 - "a dark gloomy day"
 - "grim rainy weather"
 
- 5. harshly uninviting or formidable in manner or appearance;
 - "a dour, self-sacrificing life"
 - "a forbidding scowl"
 - "a grim man loving duty more than humanity"
 - "undoubtedly the grimmest part of him was his iron claw"- J.M.Barrie
 
- 6. characterized by hopelessness; filled with gloom;
 - "gloomy at the thought of what he had to face"
 - "gloomy predictions"
 - "a gloomy silence"
 - "took a grim view of the economy"
 - "the darkening mood"