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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
sombre
adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a sombre moodBritish English, a somber mood American English (= serious and slightly sad)
▪ His death has put the country in a sombre mood.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
more
▪ A successor to Thoughts after Lambeth would have borne a more sombre message.
▪ After August 1937 the international political setting and Nizan's individual emotional state were bathed in a progressively more sombre hue.
■ NOUN
mood
▪ The fizzing guitars were joined by a trumpet and violin, contributing to the sombre mood.
▪ The killings produced a sombre mood at an anniversary rally in which at least 100,000 people took part.
▪ So right from the beginning of the poem a sombre mood is present in the poem.
▪ Arty sat in sombre mood, thinking of death.
▪ Sehnsucht has many intimations of Schwanengesang: Fassbaender and Reimann perfectly reflect its sombre mood.
▪ Benjamin remained locked in the sombre mood which had dogged him since he had witnessed Buckingham's execution.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ The sun was shining brightly, but the mood was sombre.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ If the outcome of this sombre, lovingly detailed film is unsurprising, its emotional power is undeniable.
▪ In sombre silence, wearing black ties, the Calvinist elders walk between the unusually-full pews.
▪ In the sombre main chamber where most of his days were spent, there was no decoration, no contrasting texture.
▪ In the Allegretto the music begins in the sombre low register and gradually rises through the octaves.
▪ The procession was one of sombre colours, khaki and air force blue predominating.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Sombre

Somber \Som"ber\, Sombre \Som"bre\(?; 277), a. [F. sombre; cf. Sp. sombra, shade, prob. from LL. subumbrare to put in the shade; L. sub under + umbra shade. See Umbrage.]

  1. Dull; dusky; somewhat dark; gloomy; as, a somber forest; a somber house.

  2. Melancholy; sad; grave; depressing; as, a somber person; somber reflections.

    The dinner was silent and somber; happily it was also short.
    --Beaconsfield.

Sombre

Somber \Som"ber\, Sombre \Som"bre\, v. t. To make somber, or dark; to make shady. [R.]

Sombre

Somber \Som"ber\, Sombre \Som"bre\, n. Gloom; obscurity; duskiness; somberness. [Obs.]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
sombre

chiefly British English spelling of somber (q.v.); for spelling, see -re.

Wiktionary
sombre
  1. 1 dark; gloomy. 2 dull or dark in colour. 3 melancholy; dismal. 4 grave. n. (context obsolete English) gloom; obscurity; duskiness v

  2. To make sombre or dark; to make shady.

WordNet
sombre
  1. adj. grave or even gloomy in character; "solemn and mournful music"; "a suit of somber black"; "a somber mood" [syn: somber]

  2. lacking brightness or color; dull; "drab faded curtains"; "sober Puritan gray"; "children in somber brown clothes" [syn: drab, sober, somber]

Wikipedia
Sombre

Sombre is a 1998 French film directed by Philippe Grandrieux, starring Marc Barbé and Elina Löwensohn. The film was nominated for the Golden Leopard and won the C.I.C.A.E. Award - Special Mention at the Locarno International Film Festival.

Usage examples of "sombre".

Away to the back of the apse sparkled bits of gold and silver, half-seen skirts of velvet and of silk, a distant dazzling of the tabernacle among the sombre surroundings of green verdure.

It had an air of somewhat gloomy respectability, and was presided over by an angular lady whose appearance carried the suggestion that she must be in mourning for a near relation, since she wore a bombasine dress of sombre hue, without frills, or lace, or even a ribbon to lighten its sobriety.

Sugar considers tickling Caddie with a description of her faulty grammar made flesh: a procession of earnest moustachioed policemen, pretty skirts frou-frouing under their sombre overcoats.

During the two mortal hours of suspense, full of sombre thoughts and the most melancholy ideas, I could not help fancying that I was going to be plunged in one of these horrible dens, where the wretched inhabitants feed on idle hopes or become the prey of panic fears.

Blanche Creamer, who had taken such a fancy to him, or a chat with the Widow Rowens, who was very lively in her talk, for all her sombre colors, and reminded him a good deal of same of his earlier friends, the senoritas,--all these were distractions, to be sure, but not enough to keep his fiery spirit from fretting itself in longings for more dangerous excitements.

If to--day it flaunted its tower, its summer-houses, its outbuildings, in tints that the French so well call criard, one might be sure that tomorrow the dark Murray pines, the broad-leafed Moreton Bay fig tree, the inevitable Pinus insignis that dotted the lawn in front of the house, would interpose their rich sombre green between your vision and the brightness of colouring that offended it.

Yet, as soon as Cumshaw fancied he was observed, the mask of his face melted into a smile, and the sombre eyes sparkled with a humor that somehow seemed too real to be assumed.

Elle perce mal les feuillages denses des pruniers et le cantonnement immobile reste sombre.

She was still wearing the red Paisley dress which echoed her complexion so unfortunately, but the Honiton fichu and gold-set diamonds of the evening before lightened the sombre effect.

And now, excited by the near prospect of comparative rest and freedom, I exulted in the idea of exchanging the red--lined roads and yellow mullock heaps, the iron or wooden shanties, the sombre shadeless forest, amid which I had sojourned so long, for the cool streets, the lofty freestone walls, the massed flower thickets, and the unfamiliar luxuries of the City of the Sea.

Theos at once joined him, and the two friends, holding each other fast by the arm, gazed down on the silent, mighty multitude around them,--a huge concourse of the citizens of Al-Kyris, who, strange as this part of their behavior seemed, still paid no heed to the presence of their Laureate, but with pale, rapt faces and anxious, frightened eyes, riveted their attention entirely on the sombre, blackgarmented Prophet whose thin ghostly arms, outstretched above them, appeared to mutely invoke in their behalf some special miracle of mercy.

It is true that a hundred chalets dotted the Alps, or those mountain pasturages which spread themselves a thousand fathoms above the Leman, on the foundation of rock that lay like a wall behind Montreux, shining still with the brightness of a bland even, but all below was fast catching the more sombre colors of the hour.

Black marauders among blithe birds of peace and joy, they watched like sable spirits near the nests, or on some near sea rocks, sombre and alone, blinked evilly at the tall bright cliffs and the lightsome legions nestling there.

THE RIDE Peggy Davidson sat hunched up on a lop-sided pouf fe in front of the fire between her husband and the dark, sombre man who had, in some strange way, become part and parcel of their joint lives.

If you can stand a few hours of talk from an old smacksman you may hear a sombre litany of horror.