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  1. Dictionary
    gaunt
    /ɡɔːnt/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. GAUNT definition: 1. very thin, especially because of sickness or hunger: 2. empty and not attractive: 3. very…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of GAUNT is excessively thin and angular. How to use gaunt in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Gaunt.

  4. It means you look skinny like you're sick, not skinny like you have a personal nutritionist slapping your hand when you reach for a bonbon. A good way to remember gaunt is that it rhymes with haunt, and gaunt people look pale, drawn, and wasted — like you'd expect a haunting ghost to appear.

  5. Gaunt definition: extremely thin and bony; haggard and drawn, as from great hunger, weariness, or torture; emaciated. . See examples of GAUNT used in a sentence.

  6. GAUNT meaning: 1. very thin, especially because of sickness or hunger: 2. empty and not attractive: 3. very…. Learn more.

  7. extremely thin and bony; haggard and drawn, as from great hunger, weariness, or torture; emaciated. 2. bleak, desolate, or grim, as places or things. a gaunt, windswept landscape. SYNONYMS 1. lean, spare, scrawny, lank, angular, rawboned. See thin. ANTONYMS 1. stout.

  8. gaunt. adjective. /ɡɔːnt/ (of a person) very thin, usually because of illness, not having enough food, or worry. a gaunt face. She looked gaunt and exhausted. The lean face had grown gaunt, the cheeks hollowed. her rather gaunt features. Topics Appearance c2. Want to learn more?

  9. 1. extremely thin and bony; haggard and drawn, as from hunger or weariness. 2. bleak, desolate, or grim: the gaunt landscape of the tundra. [1400–50; late Middle English, probably < Old French gaunet, jaunet yellowish, derivative of gaune, jaune yellow < Latin galbinus greenish yellow] gaunt′ly, adv. gaunt′ness, n.

  10. From Middle English gawnt, gawnte (“lean, slender”), from Old French, probably from a Scandinavian source, related to Old Norse gandr (“magic staff, stick”), from Proto-Germanic *gandaz (“stick, staff”), from Proto-Indo-European *gʷʰen- (“to beat, hit, drive”).

  11. Jun 12, 2024 · gaunt ( comparative gaunter, superlative gauntest) Lean, angular and bony . Haggard, drawn and emaciated . Bleak, barren and desolate .