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    Sub·fusc
    /ˌsəbˈfəsk/

    adjective

    • 1. dull; gloomy: literary "the light was subfusc and aqueous"

    noun

    • 1. the formal clothing worn for examinations and formal occasions at some universities. British
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  3. The meaning of SUBFUSC is drab, dusky. “Subfusc.” Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/subfusc.Accessed 17 ...

  4. The earliest known use of the word subfusc is in the early 1700s. OED's earliest evidence for subfusc is from around 1705, in the writing of Thomas D'Urfey, playwright and writer. subfusc is a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: Latin subfuscus. See etymology.

  5. Subfusc definition: subfuscous; dusky.. See examples of SUBFUSC used in a sentence.

  6. sub·fusc (sŭb-fŭsk′) adj. Of a dark, dull, or somber color. n. Dark, dull clothing. [Latin subfuscus, brownish : sub-, sub- + fuscus, dark.] American Heritage ...

  7. subfusc: 1 adj devoid of brightness or appeal “a subfusc mining town” “dark subfusc clothing” Synonyms: unattractive lacking beauty or charm

  8. 5 days ago · The formal clothing worn for examinations and formal occasions at some universities; in poetic and literary use, subfusc as an adjective means ‘dull, gloomy’. The term, recorded from the early 18th century, comes from Latin subfuscus, from sub- ‘somewhat’ + fuscus ‘dark brown’. From: subfusc in The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and ...

  9. Houses hunched like weary giants, wrapped in subfusc cloaks of night. One remembers how audibly and visibly subfusc was the almost apologetic chorus in their otherwise excellent opera, Don Carlo. Next, the costumes (by Toni-Leslie James), strictly subfusc, registering against Riccardo Hernández's brown set as murk on murk.

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