Definition
British past participle of dislustre; made dull or stripped of shine and polish.
Etymology
From dislustre + -d (British past tense/participle suffix). The -e in 'dislustre' is preserved before adding -d, following British English conventions.
Kelly Says
You'll spot this spelling in 17th-18th century British literature describing tarnished silver or dimmed jewels—it's the same meaning as 'dislustered' but marking its author as educated in the British tradition.
Translations
ARالعربية
مُخْرَج
mu-khraj
BNবাংলা
অন্ধকার
ondho-kar
CACatalà
deslustrades
des-loo-stra-des
CSČeština
matnost
mat-nost
DEDeutsch
vergilbt
fer-gilbt
ELΕλληνικά
απώλεια λάμψης
a-po-leia lam-psis
ESEspañol
deslustrado
des-loo-stra-do
FRFrançais
délustré
deh-loo-stre
GUGU
પ્રકાશહીન
pra-kaash-heen
HEעברית
חוסר בהירות
cho-ser be-he-rot
HIहिन्दी
निष्कर्ष
nish-karsh
HUMagyar
fénytelen
feh-nye-te-len
IDBahasa Indonesia
tidak bercahaya
tidak ber-ca-ha-ya
ITItaliano
disonorato
di-so-no-ra-to
JA日本語
輝きを失った
kagayaki o ushitta
KO한국어
빛을 잃었다
bit-eul il-eo-da
MSBahasa Melayu
tidak bercahaya
tidak ber-ca-ha-ya
NLNederlands
verbleekt
ver-bleekt
PLPolski
bladość
blah-do-sht
PTPortuguês
deslustrado
des-loo-stra-do
RORomână
lipsit de strălucire
lip-sit de stră-lu-ci-re
RUРусский
потерявший блеск
poterya-vshyy blist
SWKiswahili
kupuu
koo-poo
TAதமிழ்
ஒளியின்மை
o-li-yin-mai
TEతెలుగు
చెదరద
che-da-ra-da
TLTL
walang liwanag
wa-lang lee-wa-nag
TRTürkçe
solgunlaşmış
sol-gun-laş-mış
UKУкраїнська
потухнути
po-tukh-nu-tyi
ZH中文
黯淡无光
àn dàn wú guāng
ZUZU
isilwane
ee-see-lwa-ne