Meaning of dolour | Babel Free
/ˈdɒlə/Definitions
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Anguish, grief, misery, or sorrow. UK, literary, uncountable
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In economics and utilitarianism: a unit of pain used to theoretically weigh people's outcomes. UK, countable
Equivalents
Examples
“Who dyes the vtmoſt dolor doth abye, / But who that liues, is lefte to waile his loſſe: / So life is loſſe, and death felicity.”
“But for all this thou ſhalt haue as many Dolors for thy Daughters, as thou canſt tell in a yeare.”
“Gon[zalo]. When euery greefe is entertaind, / That's offer'd comes to th'entertainer. / Seb[astian]. A dollor. / Gon. Dolour comes to him indeed, you haue ſpoken truer then you purpos'd / Seb. You haue taken it wiſelier then I meant you ſhould.”
“This Duke (ſaith [Richard] Grafton) being an aged man, and fortunate before in all his vvarres, vpon this diſtaſture impreſſed ſuch dolour of mind, that for verie griefe thereof he liued not long after.”
“[E]very ſentence of that Book, every groan of that Man [Francesco Spiera], with all the reſt of his actions in his dolours, […] was as knives and daggers in my Soul; […]”
“[T]o think that I am going to leave her—and to leave her in distress and dolour—No, Miss Lucy, you need never think it!”
“Perchance a congregation to fulfil / Solemnities of silence in this doom, / Mysterious rites of dolour and despair / Permitting not a breath or chant of prayer?”
“Supposedly, utilitarians are able to add and subtract hedons (units of pleasure) and dolors (units of pain) without any signs of cognitive or affective distress […]”
CEFR level
B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.