grimful
English
Etymology
From Middle English grimful, grymfull, from Old English grimfull (“fierce, terrible”), equivalent to grim (noun) + -ful.
Adjective
grimful (comparative more grimful, superlative most grimful)
- Characterised by grimness; harsh, wrathful, terrible.
- 1860, Charles Campbell, History of the Colony and Ancient Dominion of Virginia, page 545:
- And fist, sledge-hammer like; nor grimful face […]
- 1870, Thomas Roscoe, The Works of Jonathan Swift:
- The greatest favour grimful Death can show Is with swift dart to expedite the blow.
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