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  1. Dictionary
    mood
    /muːd/

    noun

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. B1. the way you feel at a particular time: She's in a good/ bad mood. Her mood seemed to change during the course of the conversation. The drink had put him in an amiable mood. The public mood changed dramatically after the bombing. The mood of the crowd suddenly turned (= the crowd suddenly became) aggressive.

  3. The meaning of MOOD is a conscious state of mind or predominant emotion : feeling; also : the expression of mood especially in art or literature. How to use mood in a sentence.

  4. B1. the way you feel at a particular time: She's in a good/ bad mood. Her mood seemed to change during the course of the conversation. The drink had put him in an amiable mood. The public mood changed dramatically after the bombing. The mood of the crowd suddenly turned (= the crowd suddenly became) aggressive.

  5. a distinctive emotional quality or character: The mood of the music was almost funereal. a prevailing emotional tone or general attitude: the country's mood. a frame of mind disposed or receptive, as to some activity or thing: I'm not in the mood to see a movie. a state of sullenness, gloom, or bad temper. mood.

  6. Mood refers to how you feel at the present time. If you want to ask your boss for a raise, wait until he or she is in a good mood. Don't ask, though, if he or she is "in a mood " - that means the person is grumpy. If you are in the mood for something like ice cream or spicy food, you would like to have it now.

  7. Definition of mood noun in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  8. Your mood is the way you are feeling at a particular time. If you are in a good mood, you feel cheerful. If you are in a bad mood, you feel angry and impatient.

  9. to want to do or have something: I'm not really in the mood for shopping at the moment. be in no mood for sth/to do sth. to not want to do something with someone else, often because you are angry with them. mood noun (GRAMMAR) in grammar, one of the different ways a sentence is being used, for example to give an order, express a fact, etc:

  10. 1. A particular state of mind or emotion: news that put us in a good mood. 2. A pervading impression of an observer: the somber mood of the painting. 3. An instance or spell of sulking or angry behavior: A friend's visit lifted him out of his mood. 4. Inclination; disposition: I'm in the mood for ice cream.

  11. MOOD meaning: 1 : the way someone feels a person's emotional state; 2 : an attitude or feeling shared by many people.