Dictionary Definition
dark adj
1 devoid or partially devoid of light or
brightness; shadowed or black or somber-colored; "sitting in a dark
corner"; "a dark day"; "dark shadows"; "the theater is dark on
Mondays"; "dark as the inside of a black cat" [ant: light]
2 (used of color) having a dark hue; "dark
green"; "dark glasses"; "dark colors like wine red or navy blue"
[ant: light]
3 brunet (used of hair or skin or eyes); "dark
eyes"
4 stemming from evil characteristics or forces;
wicked or dishonorable; "black deeds"; "a black lie"; "his black
heart has concocted yet another black deed"; "Darth Vader of the
dark side"; "a dark purpose"; "dark undercurrents of ethnic
hostility"; "the scheme of some sinister intelligence bent on
punishing him"-Thomas Hardy [syn: black, sinister]
5 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" [syn: blue, depressing, disconsolate, dismal, dispiriting, gloomy, grim]
6 secret; "keep it dark"; "the dark mysteries of
Africa and the fabled wonders of the East"
7 showing a brooding ill humor; "a dark scowl";
"the proverbially dour New England Puritan"; "a glum, hopeless
shrug"; "he sat in moody silence"; "a morose and unsociable
manner"; "a saturnine, almost misanthropic young genius"- Bruce
Bliven; "a sour temper"; "a sullen crowd" [syn: dour, glowering, glum, moody, morose, saturnine, sour, sullen]
8 lacking enlightenment or knowledge or culture;
"this benighted country"; "benighted ages of barbarism and
superstition"; "the dark ages"; "a dark age in the history of
education" [syn: benighted]
9 marked by difficulty of style or expression;
"much that was dark is now quite clear to me"; "those who do not
appreciate Kafka's work say his style is obscure" [syn: obscure]
10 having skin rich in melanin pigments;
"National Association for the Advancement of Colored People"; "the
dark races"; "dark-skinned peoples" [syn: colored, coloured, dark-skinned]
11 not giving performances; closed; "the theater
is dark on Mondays"
Noun
2 absence of moral or spiritual values; "the
powers of darkness" [syn: iniquity, wickedness, darkness]
4 the time after sunset and before sunrise while
it is dark outside [syn: night, nighttime] [ant: day]
5 an unenlightened state; "he was in the dark
concerning their intentions"; "his lectures dispelled the darkness"
[syn: darkness]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From deorcPronunciation
- /dɑː(r)k/, /dA:(r)k/,
- Rhymes with: -ɑː(r)k
Adjective
- Having an absolute or (more often) relative lack of light.
- The room was too dark for reading.
- In the context of "of colour": Dull or deeper in hue; not bright or light.
- My sister's hair is darker than mine.
- Her skin grew dark with a suntan.
- My sister's hair is darker than mine.
- Hidden, secret
- "Meantime we shall express our darker purpose" (Shakespeare, King Lear, i 1).
- Without moral or spiritual light; sinister, malign.
- Conducive to hopelessness; depressing or bleak
- The Great Depression was a dark time.
- Lacking progress in science or the arts; said of a time period
- With emphasis placed on the unpleasant aspects of life; said of
a work of fiction, a work of nonfiction presented in narrative form
or a portion of either
- The ending of this book is rather dark.
Synonyms
- italbrac realtive lack of light: dim, gloomy
- italbrac sinister or secret: hidden, secret, sinister
- italbrac without morals: malign, sinister
- italbrac of colour: deep
Antonyms
Translations
having an absolute or relative lack of light
- Breton: teñval
- Bulgarian: тъмен
- Chinese Characters: (àn)
- Chinese:
- Czech: tmavý, temný
- Danish: mørk
- Dutch: donker, duister
- Finnish: pimeä
- French: obscure
- Galician: escuro
- Gilbertese: ro
- German: dunkel
- Greek: σκοτεινός (skoteinós)
- Hebrew: חשוך (khashukh) , חשוכה (khashukha)
- Hindi: अंधेरा
- Hungarian: sötét
- Icelandic: dökkur , dökk , dökkt , dimmur , dimm , dimmt
- Italian: scuro, oscuro, fosco, tetro
- Japanese: 暗い ()
- Korean: 어둡다 (eodupda)
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: تاریک
- Latin obscūrus
- Latvian: tumšs , tumša
- Malay: gelap
- Malayalam: ഇരുട്ട് (iruttu), അന്ധകാരം (andhakaaram)
- Marathi: अंधार, अंधकार, काळोख
- Polish: ciemny , ciemna , ciemne , ciemni , ciemne ,
- Romanian: murg
- Russian: тёмный
- Scots: daurk
- Serbian: tama, tamnina
- Slovene: temen , temna , temno
- Spanish: oscuro
- Swedish: mörk
- Vietnamese: tối
- West Frisian: tsjuster, donker
hidden, secret
- Bulgarian: тъмен
- Chinese:
- Czech: temný
- Danish: dunkel, hemmelighedsfuld
- Dutch: duister
- Finnish: pimeä
- French: noir
- German: dunkel, düster
- Hindi: गुप्त, छिपा हुवा
- Hungarian: sötét
- Italian: oscuro, fosco, tetro
- Japanese: 隠密の, 秘密の
- Korean: 어둡다 (eodupda)
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: تاریک
- Latvian: tumšs , tumša
- Marathi: गुप्त, लपलेले
- Polish: mroczny , mroczna , mroczne , mroczni , mroczne ,
- Serbian: zamračeno, zatamnjeno
- Slovene: temen , temna , temno
- Swedish: mörk
- Vietnamese: mờ ám
without moral or spiritual light
not bright or light, deeper in hue
- ttbc Albanian: errët, murgash
- ttbc Catalan: fosc
- ttbc Croatian: taman
- ttbc French: sombre
- ttbc Ido: tenebroza
- ttbc Italian: buio, tenebroso, oscuro, fosco
- ttbc Lithuanian: tamsus
- ttbc Old Norse: dökkr
- ttbc Romanian: intunecat, sumbru, obscur
- ttbc Serbian: mračan , mračna , mračno
- ttbc Slovak: tmavý
- ttbc Spanish: oscuro
- ttbc Telugu: అంధకారం (aMdhakaaraM)
Noun
- A complete or (more often) partial absence of light.
- Dark surrounds us completely.
- Ignorance
- We kept him in the dark.
- Nightfall
- It was after dark before we got to playing baseball.
Translations
a complete or partial absence of light
- Breton: teñvalded
- Bulgarian: мрак, тъмнина
- Chinese:
- Danish: mørke
- Dutch: donker
- Finnish: pimeys
- German: Dunkelheit, Dunkel
- Hebrew: חושך (khoshekh)
- Hungarian: sötétség
- Italian: oscurità, tenebra
- Japanese: 暗黒 (ankoku), 暗闇 (kurayami), 闇 (yami)
- Korean: 어둠 (eodum), 암흑 (amheuk)
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: تاریک
- Latin: obscuritas
- Latvian: tumsa
- Polish: ciemność
- Russian: тьма, темнота, мрак
- Serbian: tama, tamnoća, polumrak (semi dark), tamnina, mrak
- Slovene: tema
- Spanish: oscuridad
- Swedish: mörker
- Vietnamese: bóng tối
ignorance
- Breton: teñvalijenn
- Bulgarian: невидение , незнание
- Chinese:
- Danish: uvidenhed
- Dutch: ongewisse, onwetendheid
- Finnish: tietämättömyys
- German: Dunkel
- Hungarian: tudatlanság
- Italian: oscurità
- Korean: 무식 (musik)
- Latin: obscuritas
- Malayalam: അറിവില്ലായ്മ (aRivillayma), അജ്ഞത (ajnjatha)
- Polish: mroki pl n
- Russian: неведение (n'ev'éd'enije)
- Slovene: nevednost
- Spanish: oscuridad
- Vietnamese: (sự) dốt nát, (sự) ngu dốt, (sự) ngu muội
nightfall
- Bulgarian: свечеряване
- Chinese:
- Danish: mørke, skumring
- Dutch: het vallen van de avond
- Finnish: pimeys
- French: tombée de la nuit
- German: Dunkelwerden
- Greek: σούρουπο
- Hungarian: sötétedés
- Italian: tenebra, tramonto
- Korean: 해질녘 (haejilnyeok)
- Latin: annoctatio
- Polish: zmrok
- Russian: темнота
- Serbian: mrak, tamnoća, tamnina
- Slovene: tema, mrak
- Spanish: anochecer
- Vietnamese: đêm
- ttbc Albanian: terr
- ttbc Breton: teñvalijenn
- ttbc Catalan: fosca
- ttbc Croatian: tama
- ttbc French: noir , obscurité
- ttbc Ido: tenebro
- ttbc Italian: buio
- ttbc Romanian: intuneric , obscuritate
- ttbc Serbian: mrak
- ttbc Telugu: చీకటి (cIkaTi), నిశి (niSi), నిశీధి (niSIdhi), రాత్రి (raatri)
Related terms
Derived terms
- after dark = after night has fallen
- at dark = during nightfall
- before dark = before night starts falling
- the dark side = a distinctly negative ethical paradigm (see Wikipedia article).
Extensive Definition
Darkness (also called lightlessness) is the
absence of light.
Scientifically it is only possible to have a reduced amount of
light. The emotional response to an absence of light has inspired
metaphor in literature, symbolism in art, and emphasis.
Scientific
A dark object reflects fewer visible photons than other objects, and therefore appears dim in comparison. For example, matte black paint does not reflect visible light and appears dark, but white paint reflects all visible light and appears bright. For more information see color. However; light cannot simply be absorbed without limit. Energy, like visible light, cannot be created or destroyed. It can only be converted from one type of energy to another. Most objects that absorb visible light reemit it as infrared light. So, although an object may appear dark, it is likely bright at a frequency that a human being cannot see. For more information see thermodynamics.A dark area has few, if any, light sources
present, making everything hard to see, like at night. Exposure to
alternating light and darkness (night and day) has caused several
evolutionary adaptations to darkness. When a vertebrate, like a human, is
placed in a dark area, its iris
dilates, allowing more light to enter the eye and improving
night
vision.
The scientific definition of light includes the
entire electromagnetic
spectrum, not just visible
light, so it is scientifically impossible to create perfect
darkness. For example, all objects radiate heat in the form of
infrared
light and gamma rays,
extremely high frequency light, can penetrate even dense
materials.
Poetic
As a poetic term, darkness can also mean the presence of shadows, evil, or depression.Darkness can have a strong psychological impact.
It can cause depression in people with
seasonal affective disorder, fear in nyctophobics, comfort in
lygophilics, or attraction as in gothic
fashion. These emotions are used to add power to literary
imagery.
Religious texts often use darkness to make a
visual point. In the Bible, darkness was
the second to last plague (Exodus 10:21) and the location of
“weeping and gnashing of teeth.” (Matthew 8:12) The Qur’an has
been interpreted to say that those who transgress the bounds of
what is right are doomed to “burning despair and ice-cold
darkness.” (Nab 78.25) In Greek Mythology, three layers of night
surround Tartarus, a place
for the worst sinners as far beneath Hades as heaven is
high above earth.
The Hindu
goddess Kalí (black, dark
colored) is also closely associated with darkness and violence.
Although she is equally associated with motherhood and benevolence.
In Chinese
philosophy Yin is the feminine part of the Taijitu and is
represented by a dark lobe.
The use of darkness as a rhetorical
device has a long standing tradition. Shakespeare, working in
the 16th and 17th centuries, made a character call Satan the
“prince of darkness” (King Lear: III,
iv) and gave darkness jaws with which to devour love. (A
Midsummer Night’s Dream: I, i) Chaucer, a 14th century Middle
English writer, wrote that knights must cast away the “workes of
darkness.” Dante described hell as “solid darkness stain’d.” Even
in Old English there were three words that could mean darkness;
heolstor, genip, and sceadu. Heolstor also meant “hiding-place” and
became holster, genip meant “mist” and fell out of use like many
strong verbs, it is however still used in the Dutch
saying "in het geniep" which means secretly, sceadu meant “shadow”
and remained in use. The word darkness eventually evolved from the
word deorc, which meant “dark”.
Artistic
Artistically, darkness can also be used to emphasize or contrast with light. See chiaroscuro for a discussion of the uses of such contrasts in visual media.Color paints are mixed together to
create darkness, because each color absorbs certain frequencies of
light. Theoretically, mixing together the three primary colors, or
the three secondary colors, will absorb all visible light and
create black. In practice it is difficult to prevent the mixture
from taking on a brown tint.
The color of a point, on a standard 24-bit
computer
display, is defined by three numbers between 0 and 255, one
each for red, green, and blue. Because the absence of light creates
darkness, darker colors are closer to (0,0,0).
Pens use darkness, commonly in the form of blue
or black ink, to make clear markings on bright paper, commonly
white or yellow. Letters displayed on a computer display are also
usually created dark, often in the same blue and black colors, on a
light background. This difference in brightness levels is called
contrast
and makes smaller letters readable.
Paintings may use darkness to create leading
lines and voids, among
other things. These shapes are designed to draw the eye around the
painting. Shadows add perspective.
See also
- Plagues of Egypt
- Dark tourism - travel to sites associated with death and suffering.
- Dark Ages - unenlightened times.
References
dark in Catalan: Foscor
dark in Czech: Temno
dark in German: Dunkelheit
dark in Spanish: Oscuridad
dark in Esperanto: Mallumo
dark in French: Obscurité
dark in Korean: 어둠
dark in Italian: Oscurità
dark in Luxembourgish: Däischtert
dark in Dutch: Duisternis
dark in Newari: ख्युं
dark in Japanese: 闇
dark in Norwegian Nynorsk: Mørke
dark in Polish: Ciemność
dark in Sicilian: Scuru
dark in Simple English: Darkness
dark in Slovak: Temnota
dark in Finnish: Pimeys
dark in Swedish: Mörker
dark in Chinese: 黑暗
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Egyptian darkness, Erebus, Gothicism, Stygian, ableptical, abominable, abstruse, adiaphanous, age of
ignorance, amaurotic,
amoral, amorphous, amorphousness, apocalyptic, arcane, arrant, atramentous, atrocious, bad, baleful, baneful, barbarism, base, beamless, beetle-browed,
benighted, benightedness, benightment, bereft of
light, black, black as
coal, black as ebony, black as ink, black as midnight, black as
night, black-browed, black-skinned, blackish, blackness, blamable, blameworthy, bleak, blear, bleared, bleary, blind, blurred, blurry, bodeful, boding, brown, brunet, cabalistic, caliginous, castellatus, censored, cheerless, cirrose, cirrous, classified, clear as mud,
close, closed, closemouthed,
cloud-flecked, clouded,
cloudy, coal-black,
coaly, color-blind,
colored, complicated, concealed, confused, conscienceless, corrupt, corrupted, criminal, crooked, cryptic, cumuliform, cumulous, damnable, dark age, dark as
night, dark as pitch, dark-colored, dark-complexioned,
dark-skinned, darkish,
darkling, darkness, darkness visible,
darksome, dead of
night, deep, deep black,
dejected, devilish, devious, dim, dim-sighted, dire, dirty, discreet, disgraceful, dishonest, dishonorable, dismal, doleful, doomful, doubtful, dour, drab, drear, drearisome, dreary, dubious, dull, dumpish, dun, dusk, dusky, ebon, ebony, eclipsed, enigmatic, esoteric, evasive, evil, evil-starred, execrable, eyeless, faint, fateful, feeble, felonious, filmy, fishy, flagitious, flagrant, fog, fogginess, foggy, foreboding, foul, fraudulent, frowning, funebrial, funereal, fuzziness, fuzzy, gloom, gloominess, gloomy, glowering, glum, grave, gray, grim, grum, grumly, half-seen, half-visible,
hazy, heathenism, heavy, heinous, hellish, hemeralopic, hermetic, hidden, hush-hush, ignorance, ignorant, ill, ill-boding, ill-defined,
ill-fated, ill-got, ill-gotten, ill-lighted, ill-lit, ill-omened,
ill-starred, immoral,
impenetrable,
impervious to light, improper, in darkness, in the
dark, inauspicious,
incomprehensible,
inconspicuous,
indefinite, indeterminate, indeterminateness,
indirect, indistinct, indistinctness, indistinguishable,
infamous, iniquitous, ink-black,
inky, insidious, intense darkness,
intransparent,
intricate, jetty, joyless, knavish, knotty, latent, lenticularis, lightlessness, low, low-profile, lowering, mammatus, melancholy, melanian, melanic, melanistic, melano, melanotic, melanous, menacing, merely glimpsed,
midnight, mind-blind,
mist, mistiness, misty, monstrous, moodish, moody, moonlessness, mopey, moping, mopish, morose, mournful, muddy, mumbo jumbo, mumpish, murk, murkiness, murky, mysterious, mystic, mystical, mystification, mystifying, naughty, nebulous, nefarious, night, night-black, night-clad,
night-cloaked, night-dark, night-enshrouded, night-filled,
night-mantled, night-veiled, nightfall, nigrescent, nigrous, nimbose, not kosher, nubilous, nyctalopic, obfuscated, obfuscation, obscurantism, obscuration, obscure, obscure darkness,
obscured, obscurity, occult, occulted, of evil portent,
ominous, opacity, opaque, out of focus, overcast, overclouded, paganism, pale, peccant, perplexity, pessimistic, pitch-black,
pitch-dark, pitch-darkness, pitchy, pitchy darkness, portending, profound, puzzling, questionable, rank, raven, raven-black, rayless, recondite, reprehensible, reprobate, restricted, roiled, roily, rotten, sable, sad, satanic, saturnine, savagery, scandalous, scowling, secret, secretive, semivisible, shadowy, shady, shameful, shameless, shapeless, shapelessness, shifty, sightless, sinful, sinister, slippery, sloe, sloe-black, sloe-colored,
smothered, sober, solemn, somber, sombrous, sorrowful, spiritually blind,
squally, stark blind,
starless, starlessness, stifled, stone-blind, stormy, stratiform, stratous, subfusc, sulky, sullen, sunless, sunlessness, suntanned, suppressed, surly, suspicious, swart, swarth, swarthiness, swarthy, tar-black, tarry, tenebrious, tenebrose, tenebrosity, tenebrous, tenebrousness, the
palpable obscure, threatening, thunderheaded, top secret,
total darkness, transcendent, tricky, triste, turbid, ulterior, unbreatheable, uncertain, unclarity, unclear, unclearness, uncommunicative,
unconscienced,
unconscientious,
unconscionable,
undefined, under
security, under wraps, underhand, underhanded, undiscerning, undisclosable, undisclosed, undivulgable, undivulged, unenlightened, unenlightenment,
unethical, unfathomable, unfavorable, unforgivable, unfortunate, unilluminated, unlighted, unlit, unlucky, unobserving, unpardonable, unperceiving, unplain, unplainness, unprincipled, unpromising, unpropitious, unrecognizable, unrevealable, unrevealed, unsavory, unscrupulous, unseeing, unspeakable, unspoken, unstraightforward,
untellable, untold, untoward, unutterable, unuttered, unwhisperable, unworthy, vague, vagueness, velvet darkness,
vicious, vile, villainous, visionless, weak, weariful, wearisome, weary, wicked, without remorse, without
shame, wrong