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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a miserable man" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a man who is unhappy, discontented, or in a state of distress.
Example: "Despite his wealth, he was often seen as a miserable man, always complaining about his life."
Alternatives: "an unhappy man" or "a discontented man."
Exact(8)
We arrived at about 8pm and there was no food, just a miserable man waiting behind the reception desk.
A miserable man in a camel's-hair coat screaming under an elevated train.
"He's a miserable man to inhabit, worse than any drama I've ever done.
Even in a miserable man like Levin, "fellow-feeling for another human was hard to contain".
Coulthard has looked a miserable man this summer as he has seen his championship challenge fizzle out.
"He was by no means a miserable man, but he was very strict with the players and there were lots of arguments about discipline.
Similar(52)
He hears of a mute, miserable man who will speak to no one whatsoever, a traveler who wanders in despair having lost both his wife and daughter to the fates.
"Let's face it, Bob you're a lonely, miserable man," Phil Danny Kayee) tells his song-and-dance partner and old Army buddy (Bing Crosby) in WHITE CHRISTMAS (1954).
His dad, Robert (Aiden Gillen), is an angry, miserable man, embittered by the failure of his marriage to Penny Maria Doyle Kennedyy).
A lonely and miserable man in a hospital room.
If I wasn't a broadcaster, I'd be......a miserable man doing construction with a wife I hate.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com