Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • adjective comparative form of miserable: more miserable

Etymologies

Sorry, no etymologies found.

Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word miserabler.

Examples

  • Yeah, you miserabler piece of human trash ... violent death is very amusing!

    Think Progress » Rumsfeld: ‘The Implication That There Was Something Wrong with the War Plan is Amusing’ 2006

  • I don't mind going back to London; I thought I could never be so happy anywhere as in the country, but I've been miserabler than I ever was in London.

    Odd Amy le Feuvre

  • He thought of himself frying bacon and eggs in his own kitchen at home - for he could feel inside that it was high time for some meal or other; but that only made him miserabler.

    The Hobbit Tolkien, J. R. R. 1938

  • There's nothin 'looks more miserabler than a good suit of clothes with a dirty neck fornenst it.

    The Second Chance 1910

  • Them contrasts make me miserabler than ever, an 'I'm likely to get wickeder too.

    The Border Watch A Story of the Great Chief's Last Stand 1890

  • But after we had made that play last as long as we could, and it grew later and later, it began to seem miserabler than ever.

    The Christmas Fairy and Other Stories Frances E. Crompton 1883

  • A meaner, low-liveder, miserabler caper, I never see nor heard of.

    Sweet Cicely — or Josiah Allen as a Politician Marietta Holley 1881

  • And what a capital hit on the hypocritical apologies of conceited housekeepers is this bit from Mrs. Whicher ( "Widow Bedott"): "A person that didn't know how wimmin always go on at such a place would a thought that Miss Gipson had tried to have everything the miserablest she possibly could, and that the rest on 'em never had anything to hum but what was miserabler yet."

    The Wit of Women Fourth Edition Kate Sanborn 1878

  • Melbourne, and she began to look miserable and miserabler whenever she spoke about marrying the old man, and wished she'd drownded herself first.

    Robbery under Arms; a story of life and adventure in the bush and in the Australian goldfields Rolf Boldrewood 1870

  • By the evening I had ignominiously broken down, and was plunged in the depths of an exasperated pessimism too deep even for tears, and would have believed myself the meanest and most miserable of mankind, but that everybody else, without exception, was even meaner and miserabler than myself.

    Peter Ibbetson George Du Maurier 1865

Comments

Log in or sign up to get involved in the conversation. It's quick and easy.