Doom DOOM, v.t. [L., to esteem, and perhaps with the root of
condemn. See Deem.] 1. To judge. [Unusual.] Thou didst not
doom so strictly. 2. To condemn to any punishment; to consign
by a decree or sentence; as, the criminal is doomed to chains.
3. To pronounce sentence or judgment on. Absolves the just, and
dooms the guilty souls. 4. To command authoritatively. Have I a
tongue to doom my brothers death. 5. To destine; to fix irrevocably
the fate or direction of; as, we are doomed to suffer for our sins and
errors. 6. To condemn, or to punish by a penalty. DOOM,
n. 1. Judgment; judicial sentence. To Satan, first in sin,
his doom applied. Hence, the final doom is the last judgment.
2. Condemnation; sentence; decree; determination affecting the fate
or future state of another; usually a determination to inflict evil,
sometimes otherwise. Revoke that doom of mercy. 3. That state
to which one is doomed, or destined. To suffer misery is the doom of
sinners. To toil for subsistence is the doom of most men. 4. Ruin;
destruction. From the same foes, at last, both felt their doom.
5. Discrimination. [Not used.]
doom
n 1: an unpleasant or disastrous destiny; "everyone was aware of
the approaching doom but was helpless to avoid it"; "that's
unfortunate but it isn't the end of the world" [syn:
doom, doomsday, day of reckoning, end of the world]
v 1: decree or designate beforehand; "She was destined to become
a great pianist" [syn: destine, fate, doom,
designate]
2: pronounce a sentence on (somebody) in a court of law; "He was
condemned to ten years in prison" [syn: sentence,
condemn, doom]
3: make certain of the failure or destruction of; "This decision
will doom me to lose my position"
doom
O.E. dom "law, judgment, condemnation," from P.Gmc. *domaz, from PIE
root *dhe-/*dho- (cf. Skt. dhaman- "law," Gk. themis "law," Lith. dome
"attention"). A book of laws in O.E. was a dombec. Modern sense of
"fate, ruin, destruction" is c.1600, from the finality of the Christian
Judgment Day.
doom I. nounEtymology: Middle English, from Old English dōm; akin to
Old High German tuom condition, state, Old English dōn to do
Date: before 12th century 1. a law or ordinance especially
in Anglo-Saxon England 2.a.judgment, decision; especially a judicial condemnation
or sentence b.(1)judgment 3a (2)judgment day 1
3.a.destiny; especially unhappy destiny b.death, ruinSynonyms:seefateII. transitive verbDate: 15th century 1. to give judgment against ;condemn2.a. to fix the fate of ;destine <felt he was
doomed to a life of loneliness> b. to make certain
the failure or destruction of <the scandal doomed her
chances for election>
doom n. & v. --n. 1 a a grim fate or destiny. b death or ruin. 2 a a condemnation; a judgement or sentence. b the Last Judgement (the crack of doom). 3 hist. a statute, law, or
decree. --v.tr. 1 (usu. foll. by to) condemn or destine (a city doomed to destruction). 2 (esp. as doomed adj.) consign to misfortune or destruction. Etymology: OE dom statute,
judgement f. Gmc: rel. to DO(1)
doom
(dooms, dooming, doomed)
1. Doom is a terrible future state or event which you cannot prevent.
...his warnings of impending doom.N-UNCOUNT
2. If you have a sense or feeling of doom, you feel that things are going very badly
and are likely to get even worse.
Why are people so full of gloom and doom?...N-UNCOUNT
3. If a fact or event dooms someone or something to a particular fate, it makes
certain that they are going to suffer in some way.
That argument doomed their marriage to failure.= condemn
VERB: V n to n
doom
du:m n. & v. --n. 1 a a grim fate or destiny. b death or ruin. 2
a a condemnation; a judgement or sentence. b the Last Judgement (the crack of
doom). 3 hist. a statute, law, or decree. --v.tr. 1 (usu. foll. by to) condemn
or destine (a city doomed to destruction). 2 (esp. as doomed adj.) consign
to misfortune or destruction. [OE dom statute, judgement f. Gmc: rel. to DO(1)]
Doom \Doom\, n. [As. d?m; akin to OS. d?m, OHG. tuom, Dan. & Sw.
dom, Icel. d?mr, Goth. d?ms, Gr. ? law; fr. the root of E.
do, v. t. ?. See Do, v. t., and cf. Deem, -dom.]
1. Judgment; judicial sentence; penal decree; condemnation.
The first dooms of London provide especially the
recovery of cattle belonging to the citizens. --J.
R. Green.
Now against himself he sounds this doom. --Shak.
2. That to which one is doomed or sentenced; destiny or fate,
esp. unhappy destiny; penalty.
Ere Hector meets his doom. --Pope.
And homely household task shall be her doom.
--Dryden.
3. Ruin; death.
This is the day of doom for Bassianus. --Shak.
4. Discriminating opinion or judgment; discrimination;
discernment; decision. [Obs.]
And there he learned of things and haps to come, To
give foreknowledge true, and certain doom.
--Fairfax.
Syn: Sentence; condemnation; decree; fate; destiny; lot;
ruin; destruction.
Doom \Doom\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Doomed; p. pr. & vb. n.
Dooming.]
1. To judge; to estimate or determine as a judge. [Obs.]
--Milton.
2. To pronounce sentence or judgment on; to condemn; to
consign by a decree or sentence; to sentence; as, a
criminal doomed to chains or death.
Absolves the just, and dooms the guilty souls.
--Dryden.
3. To ordain as penalty; hence, to mulct or fine.
Have I tongue to doom my brother's death? --Shak.
4. To assess a tax upon, by estimate or at discretion. [New
England] --J. Pickering.
5. To destine; to fix irrevocably the destiny or fate of; to
appoint, as by decree or by fate.
A man of genius . . . doomed to struggle with
difficulties. --Macaulay.
DOOM
doom: Occurs only once in the King James Version (2 Esdras 7:43), "The day
of doom shall be the end of this time" (the Revised Version (British and
American) "the day of judgment"); but the Revised Version (British and
American) gives it as the rendering of tsephirah, in Eze 7:7,10
(the King James Version "the morning," the Revised Version, margin "the
turn" or "the crowning time"; but the meaning is not yet quite certain);
and in 1Co 4:9 (epithanatios, "as men doomed to death," the King James
Version "appointed (originally "approved") unto death"). Our word "doom" is
connected with the word "deem," and signifies either the act of judging or
(far more often) the sentence itself or the condition resulting therefrom
(compare "Deemster" of Isle of Man and Jersey). Generally, but not always,
an unfavorable judgment is implied. Compare Dryden, Coronation of Charles II,
i, 127: "Two kingdoms wait your doom, and, as you choose, This must receive
a crown, or that must lose." J. R. Van Pelt
doom
du:m n. fate, karma, destiny, fortune, lot, kismet; downfall, destruction, death, ruin,
extinction, annihilation, death, end, termination, terminus: The young warrior had defied the
Snake God, and his doom was sealed.
270 Moby Thesaurus words for "doom":
Day of Judgment, Friday, Friday the thirteenth, Judgment Day, Z,
abuse, act on, action, afflict, aggrieve, anathematize,
anathematizing, annihilation, apodosis, appoint, appointed lot,
astral influences, astrology, attaint, award, bane, befoul,
bewitch, biological death, blacklist, blight, book of fate,
bring home to, calamity, cast into hell, cataclysm, catastrophe,
ceasing, censure, cessation, cessation of life, circumstance,
clinical death, coda, conclusion, condemn, condemn to hell,
condemnation, consideration, consign to hell, constellation,
consummation, convict, conviction, corrupt, crack of doom,
crossing the bar, crucify, culmination, cup, curse, curtain,
curtains, damage, damn, damnation, day of doom, death, death knell,
death sentence, death warrant, deathblow, debt of nature, decease,
decision, decree, defile, deliverance, demise, denouement,
denounce, denouncement, denunciate, denunciation, departure,
deprave, despoil, destinate, destination, destine, destiny,
destroy, destruction, determination, devote, diagnosis, dictum,
dies funestis, disadvantage, disaster, disserve, dissolution,
distress, do a mischief, do evil, do ill, do wrong, do wrong by,
doom to perdition, doomsday, downfall, dying, ebb of life, effect,
end, end of life, end point, ending, envenom, envoi, epilogue,
eschatology, eternal rest, excommunicate, excommunication, exit,
expiration, extinction, extinguishment, fatality, fate,
final solution, final summons, final twitch, final words, finale,
finality, find, find against, find for, find guilty, finding,
finger of death, finis, finish, foredoom, fortune, future,
get into trouble, goal, going, going off, grave, guilty verdict,
hand of death, harass, harm, hex, hurt, ides of March, impair,
inevitability, infect, injure, izzard, jaws of death, jinx,
judgment, karma, kismet, knell, last, last breath, last days,
last debt, last gasp, last muster, last rest, last roundup,
last sleep, last things, last trumpet, last words, latter end,
leaving life, loss of life, lot, making an end, maltreat, mark,
menace, mistreat, moira, molest, omega, ordain, order, outrage,
parting, pass judgment, pass sentence, pass sentence on, passing,
passing away, passing over, payoff, penalize, period, perishing,
peroration, persecute, planets, play havoc with, play hob with,
poison, pollute, portion, precedent, prejudice, prognosis,
pronounce, pronounce judgment, pronounce on, pronounce sentence,
pronouncement, proscribe, proscription, quietus, rap, release,
report, resolution, rest, resting place, return a verdict, reward,
ruin, rule, ruling, savage, scathe, sentence, sentence of death,
shades of death, shadow of death, sleep, somatic death, stars,
stoppage, stopping place, summons of death, swan song, taint, term,
terminal, termination, terminus, the Judgment, threaten, torment,
torture, tragedy, trump of doom, unlucky day, utter a judgment,
verdict, verdict of guilty, violate, weird, wheel of fortune,
will of Heaven, windup, wound, wreak havoc on, wrong
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