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  1. Dictionary
    gaunt
    /ɡɔːnt/

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. GAUNT definition: 1. very thin, especially because of sickness or hunger: 2. empty and not attractive: 3. very…. Learn more.

  3. GAUNT meaning: 1. very thin, especially because of sickness or hunger: 2. empty and not attractive: 3. very…. Learn more.

  4. The meaning of GAUNT is excessively thin and angular. How to use gaunt in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Gaunt.

  5. Gaunt definition: extremely thin and bony; haggard and drawn, as from great hunger, weariness, or torture; emaciated. . See examples of GAUNT used in a sentence.

  6. extremely thin and bony; haggard and drawn, as from great hunger, weariness, or torture; emaciated. 2. bleak, desolate, or grim, as places or things. a gaunt, windswept landscape. SYNONYMS 1. lean, spare, scrawny, lank, angular, rawboned. See thin. ANTONYMS 1. stout.

  7. It means you look skinny like you're sick, not skinny like you have a personal nutritionist slapping your hand when you reach for a bonbon. A good way to remember gaunt is that it rhymes with haunt, and gaunt people look pale, drawn, and wasted — like you'd expect a haunting ghost to appear.

  8. Definition of gaunt adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  9. GAUNT definition: very thin, especially because of being sick or old: . Learn more.

  10. 1. extremely thin and bony; haggard and drawn, as from hunger or weariness. 2. bleak, desolate, or grim: the gaunt landscape of the tundra. [1400–50; late Middle English, probably < Old French gaunet, jaunet yellowish, derivative of gaune, jaune yellow < Latin galbinus greenish yellow] gaunt′ly, adv. gaunt′ness, n.

  11. Origin of Gaunt. From Middle English gawnt, gawnte (“lean, slender”), from Old French, probably from a Scandinavian source, related to Old Norse gandr (“magic staff, stick”), from Proto-Germanic *gandaz (“stick, staff”), from Proto-Indo-European *gʷʰen- (“to beat, hit, drive”).