Victor Hugo
Niccolo Machiavelli was the author of the political classic The Prince.
miserable
The act of feeling miserable.
William. S. Foster has written: 'This miserable pride of a soldier'
The correct spelling is miserable (forlorn or depressed).
Miserable does not have a tense because it is not a verb. Only verbs have tenses, and miserable is an adjective.
It was a miserable failure.He gave her a miserable look.Stop being so miserable.
Scrooge was the miserly and miserable character in Charkes Dickens' classic story "A Christmas Carol". His standard answer to people who wished him a Merry Christmas was "Bah, humbug!"
The comparative form of "miserable" is "more miserable," and the superlative form is "most miserable." Since "miserable" is a three-syllable adjective, it typically uses "more" and "most" rather than adding suffixes. For example, you might say, "This winter has been more miserable than last year," or "That was the most miserable day of my life."
The author of the children's classic Wind in the Willows.
Flimsy+miserable = Flimsable
The noun form for the adjective miserable is miserableness. Another noun form is misery.