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Adjectives commonly used to describe "luck" — vivid descriptors for richer, more specific prose.
(adj)
Of a person or an animal:
Relevance: 0%
Of low quality.
Indicative of unkind or malevolent intentions; harsh, cruel.
Greater or lesser (whichever is seen as more advantageous), in reference to value, distance, time, etc.
(of material or fluid) Solid and firm.
(adv)
To a great extent.
(by extension) Downright; complete; pure.
More severely or seriously.
(of a material) Strong and resilient; sturdy.
Free of flaws or imperfections; unsullied.
(informal, derogatory, especially of a person) Stupid.
Of perishable items, overridden with bacteria and other infectious agents.
Most commonly occurring; typical.
Not ordinary; exceptional; unusual.
(not comparable) Unable to see, or only partially able to see.
Surprisingly excellent; very good or admirable, extremely impressive.
(figurative) Amazing; astonishing; awe-inspiring.
(for non-slang definitions) superlative form of bad: most bad
Very uncommon; scarce.
Simple, unaltered.
Intending to harm; malevolent.
Causing wonder and amazement; very surprising.
Not expected, anticipated or foreseen.
(comparable) From a higher position to a lower one; downwards.
Forming an exception; not ordinary; uncommon; rare.
(colloquial) Remarkably bad; of poor quality.
(colloquial) Very remarkable; highly extraordinary; amazing.
Very bad.
Wonderful; marvelous; excellent; extraordinarily good or great (used especially as an intensifier).
(figuratively) Amazing, astonishing; so surprising that one is almost, or figuratively, unable to believe.
(informal, British, Ireland, Commonwealth, Hawaii, mildly vulgar) Used as an intensifier.
Of or relating to hell, or the world of the dead; hellish.
Widely known; famous; stereotypical.
(philosophy) Of or relating to cognition or knowledge, its scope, or how it is acquired.
Characterized by or feeling deep affliction or distress; very miserable.
Very surprising; amazing.
Extremely important; essential.
Not deserved, earned or merited; unjustifiable or unfair.
(British spelling) Exciting wonder or surprise; astonishing; wonderful.
Strange, and mysteriously unsettling (as if supernatural); weird.
Causing astonishment.
(n)
Either of the letters ъ and ь in Cyrillic alphabets, which originally represented phonemically the ultra-short vowels in Slavic languages.
(sometimes vulgar) Generic intensifier. Fucking; bloody.