SCooge is comparing the story he sees before him with his own life. It is of course exactly that
In the beginning, Scrooge was mean, a lover of money, lonely, selfish, bitter, unhappy and uncaring toward others.
Yes, he was mean.
I think we might have borrowed the slang "it sucks" from somebody else. It is usually interpeted to mean that, "I am unhappy about the situation", or "it is unfair".
Without more context being supplied it is difficult to say (i.e.: WHERE are you getting this disposition from, and in response to WHAT?)It might mean that a check shows that you have a clear criminal history record.It might mean that a Grand Jury did not hand down an indictment.It might mean the case against you was Nolle Prosse'd.It might mean the the case was Dismissed withPrejudice.It might mean that your case was successfully expunged.
You are probably hungry, or have an unhappy memory that has happend in the past that might affect you.
Infelix.
An unhappy fate.
The word "Scrooge" was first used as a slang term to mean a miserly person. The character Ebenezer Scrooge was created by Charles Dickens in his novel "A Christmas Carol" in 1843, which popularized the term.
This is from the screen play and not the book. Bob thinks that Scrooge on Boxing Day Morning had lost all reasoning and gone mad when he saw him dance about the office and offer Bob more coal.
extremely uncomfortable or unhappy
both
In the beginning, Scrooge is:- greedy- cold-hearted- mean- selfish- uncaring- not generous- darkAt the end, Scrooge is:- giving- friendly- caring- joyful- free- generous