desolate
adjective /ˈdesələt/
/ˈdesələt/
- (of a place) empty and without people, making you feel sad or frightened
- They looked out on a bleak and desolate landscape.
Extra ExamplesTopics Geographyc1- The house stands desolate and empty.
- The land was left desolate.
- The landscape was completely desolate.
- a rather desolate place
- It was difficult to imagine a more desolate place.
- The forest was now a desolate wasteland of charred tree stumps.
- There stretched out before them miles of utterly wild and desolate terrain.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs- be
- seem
- stand
- …
- completely
- quite
- rather
- …
- very lonely and unhappy synonym forlorn
- The thought that her husband did not want the baby made her feel utterly desolate.
Extra ExamplesTopics Feelingsc1- Her voice sounded a little desolate.
- She was utterly desolate after losing her baby.
- They were far from their families, desolate and frightened.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryverbs- be
- feel
- look
- …
- utterly
Word Originlate Middle English: from Latin desolatus ‘abandoned’, past participle of desolare, from de- ‘thoroughly’ + solus ‘alone’.