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2 definitions found
From:
DICT.TW English-Chinese Dictionary 英漢字典
a dark horse
黑馬
From:
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
Dark
a.
1.
Destitute
,
or
partially
destitute
,
of
light
;
not
receiving
,
reflecting
,
or
radiating
light
;
wholly
or
partially
black
,
or
of
some
deep
shade
of
color
;
not
light-colored
;
as
,
a
dark
room
;
a
dark
day
;
dark
cloth
;
dark
paint
;
a
dark
complexion
.
O
dark
,
dark
,
dark
,
amid
the
blaze
of
noon
,
Irrecoverably
dark
,
total
eclipse
Without
all
hope
of
day
! --
Milton
.
In
the
dark
and
silent
grave
.
--
Sir
W
.
Raleigh
.
2.
Not
clear
to
the
understanding
;
not
easily
seen
through
;
obscure
;
mysterious
;
hidden
.
The
dark
problems
of
existence
.
--
Shairp
.
What
may
seem
dark
at
the
first
,
will
afterward
be
found
more
plain
.
--
Hooker
.
What's
your
dark
meaning
,
mouse
,
of
this
light
word?
--
Shak
.
3.
Destitute
of
knowledge
and
culture
;
in
moral
or
intellectual
darkness
;
unrefined
;
ignorant
.
The
age
wherein
he
lived
was
dark
,
but
he
Could
not
want
light
who
taught
the
world
to
see
. --
Denhan
.
The
tenth
century
used
to
be
reckoned
by
mediæval
historians
as
the
darkest
part
of
this
intellectual
night
.
--
Hallam
.
4.
Evincing
black
or
foul
traits
of
character
;
vile
;
wicked
;
atrocious
;
as
,
a
dark
villain
;
a
dark
deed
.
Left
him
at
large
to
his
own
dark
designs
.
--
Milton
.
5.
Foreboding
evil
;
gloomy
;
jealous
;
suspicious
.
More
dark
and
dark
our
woes
.
--
Shak
.
A
deep
melancholy
took
possesion
of
him
,
and
gave
a
dark
tinge
to
all
his
views
of
human
nature
.
--
Macaulay
.
There
is
,
in
every
true
woman-s
heart
,
a
spark
of
heavenly
fire
,
which
beams
and
blazes
in
the
dark
hour
of
adversity
.
--
W
.
Irving
.
6.
Deprived
of
sight
;
blind
. [
Obs
.]
He
was
,
I
think
,
at
this
time
quite
dark
,
and
so
had
been
for
some
years
.
--
Evelyn
.
Note:
☞
Dark
is
sometimes
used
to
qualify
another
adjective
;
as
,
dark
blue
,
dark
green
,
and
sometimes
it
forms
the
first
part
of
a
compound
;
as
,
dark
-haired,
dark
-eyed,
dark
-colored,
dark
-seated,
dark
-working.
A dark horse
,
in
racing
or
politics
,
a
horse
or
a
candidate
whose
chances
of
success
are
not
known
,
and
whose
capabilities
have
not
been
made
the
subject
of
general
comment
or
of
wagers
. [
Colloq
.]
Dark house
,
Dark room
,
a
house
or
room
in
which
madmen
were
confined
. [
Obs
.] --
Shak
.
Dark lantern
.
See
Lantern
. --
The
Dark Ages
,
a
period
of
stagnation
and
obscurity
in
literature
and
art
,
lasting
,
according
to
Hallam
,
nearly
1000
years
,
from
about
500
to
about
1500
A
.
D
..
See
Middle Ages
,
under
Middle
.
The Dark and Bloody Ground
,
a
phrase
applied
to
the
State
of
Kentucky
,
and
said
to
be
the
significance
of
its
name
,
in
allusion
to
the
frequent
wars
that
were
waged
there
between
Indians
.
The dark day
,
a
day
(
May
19, 1780)
when
a
remarkable
and
unexplained
darkness
extended
over
all
New
England
.
To keep dark
,
to
reveal
nothing
. [
Low
]
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