UNPKG

word-vault

Version:

A lightweight JavaScript package for English word definitions and collections.

76 lines (75 loc) 2.74 kB
{ "term": "tragedy", "partOfSpeech": "noun", "ox5000": true, "cefr": "b2", "definitions": [ { "senseNumber": 1, "definition": "a very sad event or situation, especially one that involves death", "cefr": "b2", "examples": [ { "text": "**It's a tragedy** that she died so young." }, { "text": "**Tragedy struck** the family when their son was hit by a car and killed." }, { "text": "The whole affair **ended in tragedy**." }, { "text": "Investigators are searching the wreckage of the plane to try to find the cause of the tragedy." }, { "text": "She had seen the tragedy unfold." }, { "text": "The closure of the factory is a tragedy for the whole community." } ], "collocations": { "adjective": ["absolute", "appalling", "awful"], "verb + tragedy": ["end in", "be dogged by", "experience"], "tragedy + verb": ["befall somebody", "happen", "occur"], "preposition": ["tragedy for somebody"] } }, { "senseNumber": 2, "definition": "a serious play with a sad ending, especially one in which the main character dies; plays of this type", "cefr": "b2", "examples": [ { "text": "Shakespeare’s tragedies" }, { "text": "Greek tragedy" }, { "text": "Revenge tragedies were very popular in Elizabethan England." } ], "topics": ["Literature and writing", "Film and theatre"], "collocations": { "adjective": ["classical", "Greek", "Jacobean"], "verb + tragedy": ["write"] } } ], "pronunciations": { "uk": [ { "pronunciation": "/ˈtrædʒədi/", "audio": "tr/tragedy/tragedy__gb_1.mp3" } ], "us": [ { "pronunciation": "/ˈtrædʒədi/", "audio": "tr/tragedy/tragedy__us_1.mp3" } ] }, "wordOrigin": "late Middle English: from Old French tragedie, via Latin from Greek tragōidia, apparently from tragos ‘goat’ (the reason remains unexplained) + ōidē ‘song, ode’. Compare with tragic." }