Bleak vs Blea - What's the difference?
bleak | blea |
Without color; pale; pallid.
* Foxe
Desolate and exposed; swept by cold winds.
* Wordsworth
* Longfellow
Unhappy; cheerless; miserable; emotionally desolate.
A small European river fish (Alburnus alburnus ), of the family Cyprinidae.
The part of a tree that lies immediately under the bark; the alburnum or sapwood.
* 1814 , Benjamin Smith Barton, Elements of Botany
As nouns the difference between bleak and blea
is that bleak is a small European river fish (Alburnus alburnus), of the family Cyprinidae while blea is the part of a tree that lies immediately under the bark; the alburnum or sapwood.As an adjective bleak
is without color; pale; pallid.bleak
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) bleke (also bleche > English .Adjective
(er)- When she came out she looked as pale and as bleak as one that were laid out dead.
- Wastes too bleak to rear / The common growth of earth, the foodful ear.
- at daybreak, on the bleak sea beach
- A bleak and bare rock.
- They escaped across the bleak landscape.
- A bleak , crater-pocked moonscape.
- We hiked across open meadows and climbed bleak mountains.
- Downtown Albany felt bleak that February after the divorce.
- A bleak future is in store for you.
- The news is bleak .
- The survey paints a bleak picture.
Etymology 2
Probably from (etyl) bleikja .Noun
(en noun) (wikipedia bleak)Synonyms
* alburn * blayReferences
Anagrams
* *blea
English
Noun
(-)- Authors differ greatly in opinion concerning the formation of the blea . Linnaeus imagined it was formed by the bark. But it is certain that the whole of the bark does not give birth to the blea