Despite just earning a college degree, my job prospects look dismal due to the sluggish economy. The afternoon was cold, gray and dismal, so he curled up in front of the fireplace with a good book. We didn't buy the house because every room needed fresh paint, and the lack of windows made the whole place seem drab and dismal.
The economic forecast for next quarter is rather dismal due to decreasing consumer confidence.
The weather forecast for tomorrow looks dismal with heavy rain expected all day.
That is the correct spelling of "dismal" (depressing, gloomy, miserable).
"Dismal" is an adjective. It is used to describe something that is depressing, gloomy, or bleak.
The verb in the sentence is "give." It is the action that the subject (you) is being asked to perform.
That sentence makes no sense, but, "Give you that disk, please."
The weather is absolutely dismal today.
The man had dismal skill in the art of sentence construction.
Example sentence - The dismal weather forecast did nothing to encourage us.
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The gray skies cast a sense of dismal gloom through me.
The weather forecast for tomorrow looks dismal with heavy rain expected all day.
They traced the meteor bright as it moved along in the dismal night.
The colors we now see can be darker and dismal but they can also be brighter and bolder.
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.
"Sara gazed at the bland, dismal room sadly."
The new girl walked dismally down the school halway after an embarrasing encounter with the head cheerleader.
Dismal means sad