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Definition of dark adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

dark

adjective
 
/dɑːk/
 
/dɑːrk/
(comparative darker, superlative darkest)
Idioms
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    with little light

  1. with no or very little light, especially because it is night
    • a dark room/street/forest/night
    • What time does it get dark in summer?
    • Then the theatre went dark.
    • It was dark outside and I couldn't see much.
    • The sky was still dark.
    • Use lights to illuminate dark corners.
    opposite light see also pitch-dark
    Extra Examples
    • It gets dark at about six o'clock.
    • As it grew dark, they gathered round the fire.
    • It's only three o'clock and it's nearly dark already.
    • They stepped into the dark room and shone the torch.
    • He stumbled along through the dark forest.
    Topics Weathera1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs
    • be
    • look
    • seem
    adverb
    • extremely
    • fairly
    • very
    See full entry
  2. colours

  3. not light; closer in shade to black than to white
    • dark blue/green/red/brown
    • Darker colours are more practical and don't show stains.
    opposite light, paleTopics Colours and Shapesa1
  4. having a colour that is close to black
    • He wore a dark suit and a plain tie.
    • dark-coloured wood
    • The dark clouds in the sky meant that a storm was coming.
    Topics Colours and Shapesa1
  5. hair/skin/eyes

  6. brown or black in colour
    • Sue has long dark hair.
    • He was handsome with dark eyes.
    • Even if you have dark skin, you still need protection from the sun.
    Topics Appearancea1
  7. (of a person) having dark hair, eyes, etc.
    • a dark handsome stranger
  8. opposite fair

    mysterious

  9. mysterious; hidden and not known about
    • There are no dark secrets in our family.
  10. evil

  11. evil or frightening
    • There was a darker side to his nature.
    • the dark forces of the imagination
    • My mind was full of dark thoughts.
  12. without hope

  13. unpleasant and without any hope that something good will happen
    • the darkest days of Fascism
    • The film is a dark vision of the future.
    • The theatre stayed open even in the darkest days of the war.
  14. phonetics

  15. (of a speech sound) produced with the back part of the tongue close to the back of the mouth. In many accents of (= ways of pronouncing) English, dark /l/ is used after a vowel, as in ball. opposite clear
  16. Word OriginOld English deorc, of Germanic origin, probably distantly related to German tarnen ‘conceal’.
Idioms
a dark horse
  1. (British English) a person who does not tell other people much about their life, and who surprises other people by having interesting qualities
  2. a person taking part in a race, etc. who surprises everyone by winning
keep something dark
  1. (British English, informal) to keep something secret and not tell people about it
    • He’s got two children? Well he’s kept that dark, hasn’t he!
See dark in the Oxford Advanced American DictionarySee dark in the Oxford Learner's Dictionary of Academic English
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