Mawkish vs Lugubrious - What's the difference?
mawkish | lugubrious |
Feeling sick, queasy.
(archaic) Sickening or insipid in taste or smell.
Excessively or falsely sentimental; showing a sickly excess of sentiment.
* 2014 August 11, , "
gloomy, mournful or dismal, especially to an exaggerated degree.
As adjectives the difference between mawkish and lugubrious
is that mawkish is feeling sick, queasy while lugubrious is gloomy, mournful or dismal, especially to an exaggerated degree.mawkish
English
Alternative forms
* maukish (obsolete)Adjective
(en adjective)Robin Williams, Oscar-Winning Comedian, Dies at 63 in Suspected Suicide," New York Times
- Some of Mr. Williams’s performances were criticized for a mawkish sentimentality, like “Patch Adams,” a 1998 film that once again cast him as a good-hearted doctor, and “Bicentennial Man,” a 1999 science-fiction feature in which he played an android.
Antonyms
* (excessively or falsely sentimental) rationalSynonyms
* (excessively or falsely sentimental) cutesy, schmaltzylugubrious
English
Adjective
(en adjective)- The poor lighting and sparse maintenance, plus the rarefied traffic on its wide boulevards, made the effect of Pyongyang on the tourist distinctly lugubrious .
- His client's lugubrious expression tipped off the detective that something lurked beneath her optimistic words.