low-hearted

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See also: lowhearted

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From low +‎ hearted.

Adjective

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low-hearted (comparative more low-hearted, superlative most low-hearted)

  1. Depressed, despondent, or dispirited
    • 2014, Sir Richard Blackmore, Springhaven: A Tale of the Great War, →ISBN:
      Weary, slack-jointed, low-hearted as they were, the deadly coast-fever fell upon them, and they shivered, and burned,and groaned,and raved, and leaped into holes, or rolled into campfires.
    • 2006, Malcolm Gillies, David Pear, Mark Carroll, Self-Portrait of Percy Grainger, →ISBN:
      A dull, sulky, low-hearted state has always been natural to me, relieved only by quick bursts of excitement (not happiness) over my own art, other men's art, sex & sport.
    • 1914, Zane Grey, The Light of Western Stars:
      The afternoon Bonita an' I were married, when Gene an' the padre had gone, I was happy one minute an' low-hearted the next.
  2. Morally reprehensible, cowardly, or untrustworthy.
    • 2004, John Knight, Wildlife in Asia: Cultural Perspectives, →ISBN:
      Now they harm the people, and the malign influence behind this lies with low-hearted officials who put all their efforts into catching them.
    • 1865, Charles James Lever, Tony Butler: A Novel, page 178:
      I would not find myself at thirty brigaded with a set of low-hearted priests and seminarists, who have no other weapons than treachery, nor any strategy but lies.
    • 1820, Samuel Richardson, Mrs. Anna Letitia Barbauld, Clarissa; Or, The History of a Young Lady, page 146:
      A base, low-hearted wretch, as you justly call him, with all his pride of ancestry; and more an enemy to himself with regard to his present and future happiness, than to you, in the barbarous and ungrateful wrongs he has done you;
  3. (obsolete) Modest and unassuming.
    • 2004, Kathleen Elizabeth Diffley, To Live and Die: Collected Stories of the Civil War, 1861–1876, →ISBN:
      I was low-hearted in my ways, and she was hoping in hers, like her father was.
    • 1883, Samual Carter Hall, Retrospect of a Long Life: From 1815 to 1883, page 486:
      He was an aged man, with a withered countenance, down-looking, and low-hearted, probably (I hope it was so) the outcome of remorse.
    • 1792, Emin Joseph Emin, Amy Apcar, Life and Adventures of Emin Joseph Emin, 1726-1809:
      His poor countrymen, seeing his boldness, began to fetch deep sighs and groan like so many chained lions, speaking so loud that the khan as well as the four low-hearted chiefs, could hear them.