No, the word 'dismal' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (a dismal day, a dismal story).
The noun form of the adjective 'dismal' is dismalness.
The weather is absolutely dismal today.
dark, dull, dim, dismal, blac, grey, murky, dreary, miserable, glum, dispirited
An antonym for the word Dismal is Happy or Joyful. Dismal is causing gloom or misery or depressing.
"were always dismal" is more than one part of speech. were - verb always - adverb dismal - adjective
The gray skies cast a sense of dismal gloom through me.
The weather is absolutely dismal today.
Dismal means sad
The official definition of the word dismal is "depressing; dreary."
dark, dull, dim, dismal, blac, grey, murky, dreary, miserable, glum, dispirited
1.65 dismal
when having a great dismal you have to start being quiet during dismal (school)
An antonym for the word Dismal is Happy or Joyful. Dismal is causing gloom or misery or depressing.
No, the word 'impressive' is an adjective, a word used to describe a noun.A conjunction is a word used to join words or groups of words in a sentence.Examples:Jack and Jill had an impressivecollection of buckets.the conjunction 'and' joins the compound subject nouns;the adjective 'impressive' describes the noun 'collection.Our investment may be an impressive successor a dismal failure.the conjunction 'or' joins the noun phrase 'an impressive success' to the noun phrase 'a dismal failure';The adjective 'impressive' describes the noun 'success'.
Dismal Euphony was created in 1995.
Dismal Euphony ended in 2001.
Fatal; ill-omened; unlucky., Gloomy to the eye or ear; sorrowful and depressing to the feelings; foreboding; cheerless; dull; dreary; as, a dismal outlook; dismal stories; a dismal place.
That is the correct spelling of "dismal" (depressing, gloomy, miserable).