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adj

moody

MOO-dee
adj
1
Prone to sudden changes in emotional state; temperamental.
"Teenagers can be moody, cheerful one minute and sullen the next."
2
Sulky, gloomy, or bad-tempered.
"He went quiet and moody after losing the match."
3
Having a dark, brooding, or atmospheric quality.
"The photographer specialised in moody black-and-white landscapes."

How to Use Moody

Learner’s notes

In plain EnglishGiven to bad or changeable moods, or (for art, photos, music) having a dark, atmospheric feel.

Common pairings
moody teenager moody lighting moody silence

Word Forms

moodier comparative, moodiest superlative

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Teenagers can be _____, cheerful one minute and sullen the next.

Etymology

From Old English modig ("brave, spirited"), built from mod ("mind, spirit") plus -y; the meaning drifted over time from "spirited" toward today's "prone to bad moods."

Rhymes for moody

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Definitions: FreeDict original editorial