doom
oxford
views updated May 29 2018doom / doōm/ •
n. death, destruction, or some other terrible fate: the aircraft was sent crashing to its doom in the water. ∎ [in sing.] archaic (in Christian belief) the Last Judgment.•
v. [tr.] (usu. be doomed) condemn to certain destruction or death: fuel was spilling out of the damaged wing and the aircraft was doomed. ∎ cause to have an unfortunate and inescapable outcome: her plan was doomed to failure | [as adj.] (doomed) the moving story of their doomed love affair. PHRASES: doom and gloom (also gloom and doom) a general feeling of pessimism or despondency: the national feeling of doom and gloom.
The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
Doom
oxford
views updated Jun 08 2018Doom. Pictorial representation of the Last Judgement in the
Middle Ages. In a church it often took the form of a mural painting over the
chancel-arch, with Christ in the middle, Hell and the damned on His left (the south or right when seen from the
nave), and the Blessed on the left (north). It was also a subject for stained-glass windows: a spectacular glass Doom survives in St Mary's Church, Fairford, Glos. (late C15 and early C16).
Bibliography
E. Duffy (1992)
A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture JAMES STEVENS CURL
Doom
gale
views updated Jun 08 2018Doom ★★ 2005 (R)
It's the live-action version of the videogame. If that's your thing, you'll enjoy the flick because everyone involved knows it's a game and they get to play Space Marines (led by the Rock and Urban) and use big guns to blow away flesh-eating mutants. Hey, what could be more fun? Anything else comes to mind. 104m/C DVD, UMD, HD DVD . US Karl Urban, Rosamund Pike, DeObia Oparei, Ben Dan-iels, Raz Adoti, Richard Brake, Dexter Fletcher, Al Weaver, Brian Steele, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Yao Chin; D: Andrzej Bartkowiak; W: David Callaham, Wesley Strick; C: Tony Pierce-Roberts; M: Clint Mansell.
VideoHound's Golden Movie Retriever
doom
oxford
views updated Jun 27 2018doom death, destruction, or some other terrible fate; in Christian belief, an archaic name for the Last Judgement. The word is recorded from
Old English (in form
dōm), and originally denoted ‘statute, judgement’; it is of Germanic origin, from a base meaning ‘put in place’.
Doomsday the last day of the world's existence; Judgement Day.
Doomsday Book is sometimes found as a variant of
Domesday Book.
The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable ELIZABETH KNOWLES
doom
oxford
views updated Jun 11 2018doom ordinance, decision, trial, judgement OE.; (final) fate XIV. OE.
dōm = OFris., OS.
dōm, OHG.
tuom, ON.
dómr, Goth.
dōms :- Gmc. *
dōmaz lit. that which is set or put, f. *
dō- place, set,
DO 1.
Hence
doom vb. XV.
The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Etymology T. F. HOAD
Doom
gale
views updated May 09 2018DOOM
An archaic term for a court's judgment. For example, some criminal sentences still end with the phrase " … which is pronounced for doom."
West's Encyclopedia of American Law