0 a very sad event or situation, especially one involving death or suffering:
The pilot averted a tragedy when he succeeded in preventing the plane from crashing.
Hitler's invasion of Poland led to the tragedy of the Second World War.
Not long after they moved, tragedy struck - their son was killed in an accident.
[ + (that) ] It's a tragedy (that) so many young people are unable to find jobs.
Shakespeare's tragedies include "Hamlet", "King Lear", and "Othello".
In Greek tragedy, the role of the chorus is to express the audience's reactions to what is happening in the play.
1 a very sad event or situation, esp. one involving death or suffering:
We are deeply saddened by this devastating tragedy.
News of the tragedy has sobered us.
It's a tragedy that these young people were struck down in their prime.
The tragedy of being a dancer is that you're all washed up by the time you're 35.
Within hours of the tragedy happening, an emergency rescue team had been assembled.
Ntankumaa originated from tragedies, real or legendary, which tradition claims befell par ticular small towns, villages, families, or individuals.
In addition to these old tragedies, pugilistic encounters almost to the death had come off down to recent dates in that secluded arena.
A small tribe of a few hundred people, living through revolutions, defeats, dangers, and tragedies, defends, squanders, or regains the identity of its own ethos.
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悲劇性事件,災難,不幸, 悲劇(作品)…
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悲剧性事件,灾难,不幸, 悲剧(作品)…
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desgracia, tragedia, tragedia [feminine…
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tragédia…
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悲劇, 惨事, (演劇の)悲劇…
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facia, felaket, trajedi…
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tragédie [feminine], tragédie…
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tragèdia…
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