Open English Wordnet
Nouns
(n)blue sky, blue, blue air, wild blue yonderthe sky as viewed during daylight“he shot an arrow into the blue”
(n)amobarbital sodium, blue, blue angel, blue devil, Amytalthe sodium salt of amobarbital that is used as a barbiturate; used as a sedative and a hypnotic
Verbs
Adjectives
(s)gloomy, grim, blue, depressed, dispirited, down, downcast, downhearted, down in the mouth, low, low-spiritedfilled with melancholy and despondency“gloomy at the thought of what he had to face”, “gloomy predictions”, “a gloomy silence”, “took a grim view of the economy”, “the darkening mood”, “lonely and blue in a strange city”, “depressed by the loss of his job”, “a dispirited and resigned expression on her face”, “downcast after his defeat”, “feeling discouraged and downhearted”
(s)blasphemous, blue, profanecharacterized by profanity or cursing“foul-mouthed and blasphemous”, “blue language”, “profane words”
(s)aristocratic, aristocratical, blue, blue-blooded, gentle, patricianbelonging to or characteristic of the nobility or aristocracy“an aristocratic family”, “aristocratic Bostonians”, “aristocratic government”, “a blue family”, “blue blood”, “the blue-blooded aristocracy”, “of gentle blood”, “patrician landholders of the American South”, “aristocratic bearing”, “aristocratic features”, “patrician tastes”
(s)blue, puritanic, puritanicalmorally rigorous and strict“puritanic distaste for alcohol”, “she was anything but puritanical in her behavior”, “blue laws”
(s)blue, dark, dingy, disconsolate, dismal, gloomy, grim, sorry, drab, drear, drearycausing dejection“a blue day”, “the dark days of the war”, “a week of rainy depressing weather”, “a disconsolate winter landscape”, “the first dismal dispiriting days of November”, “a dark gloomy day”, “grim rainy weather”
