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    macabre
    /məˈkɑːbrə/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

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  3. used to describe something that is very strange and unpleasant because it is connected with death or violence: Even the police were horrified at the macabre nature of the killings. She has a pretty macabre sense of humour. Synonyms. ghastly. ghoulish disapproving. grim. grisly. gruesome. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Death and dying.

  4. Jun 16, 2011 · Macabre means having death as a subject, dwelling on the gruesome, or tending to produce horror in a beholder. Learn the origin, synonyms, examples, and word history of macabre from the Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  5. The adjective macabre is used to describe things that involve the horror of death or violence. If a story involves lots of blood and gore, you can call it macabre.

  6. used to describe something that is very strange and unpleasant because it is connected with death or violence: Even the police were horrified at the macabre nature of the killings. She has a pretty macabre sense of humor. Synonyms. ghastly. ghoulish disapproving. grim. grisly. gruesome. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Death and dying.

  7. Macabre definition: gruesome and horrifying; ghastly; horrible. . See examples of MACABRE used in a sentence.

  8. You describe something such as an event or story as macabre when it is strange and horrible or upsetting, usually because it involves death or injury. Police have made a macabre discovery. American English : macabre / məˈkɑbrə /

  9. Macabre means gruesome or horrifying by association with death or injury. It comes from the French phrase Danse Macabré, which was a popular subject of art and literature in the late Middle Ages.