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saturnine

American  
[sat-er-nahyn] / ˈsæt ərˌnaɪn /

adjective

  1. sluggish in temperament; gloomy; taciturn.

  2. suffering from lead poisoning, as a person.

  3. due to absorption of lead, as bodily disorders.


saturnine British  
/ ˌsætəˈnɪnɪtɪ, ˈsætəˌnaɪn /

adjective

  1. having a gloomy temperament; taciturn

  2. archaic

    1. of or relating to lead

    2. having or symptomatic of lead poisoning

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Word Forms

Derived Forms

Etymology

Origin of saturnine

1400–50; late Middle English < Medieval Latin sāturnīnus ( see Saturn, -ine 1)

Explanation

Medieval alchemists ascribed to the planet Saturn a gloomy and slow character. When people are called saturnine, it means they are like the planet — gloomy, mean, scowling. Not exactly the life of the party. Saturnine is a word you don't hear often nowadays, though you probably know people with saturnine dispositions. The ultimate saturnine character in literature is Heathcliff — and for clarification's sake, that would be the bitter, brooding, obsessive hero of Wuthering Heights, not the lovably pudgy cat of comic-strip fame.

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Vocabulary lists containing saturnine

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“For all his Saturnine and Martial defense of psyche in our scientifically defined cosmos,” Mr. Rylance wrote in a statement, “he is the most jovial person to sit with.”

From New York Times • Oct. 28, 2011

These detonations signaled the attempt last week by President Cardenas to put the final squeeze on his old friend, Saturnine Cedillo.

From Time Magazine Archive

General Saturnine Cedillo, boss of San Luis Potosi, appointed another Mayor, but the townspeople resented the dictation, called for a regular election.

From Time Magazine Archive

At the town of Rio Verde they found belligerent bands of agrarian soldiers, members of the private army of San Luis Potos�'s General Saturnine Cedillo.

From Time Magazine Archive

Of the secte Saturnine: Of the Saturnine school; so called because his history of the Jewish wars narrated many horrors, cruelties, and sufferings, over which Saturn was the presiding deity.

From The Canterbury Tales, and Other Poems by Purves, D. Laing

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