ténébreux
dark, mysterious
adjective teh-neh-BRUH Rare
Origin: From Latin 'tenebrosus' (full of darkness), from 'tenebrae' (darkness).
Also means
gloomy, sinister
Usage Note
Ténébreux carries a romantic, literary register — it is often applied to a brooding, darkly attractive man (un beau ténébreux), a stock figure in 19th-century French Romantic literature. The feminine form is ténébreuse. In everyday speech it is less common than sombre and tends to sound deliberately dramatic.
Examples
"Il avait un regard ténébreux et mystérieux."
Natural Translation
He had a dark and mysterious gaze.
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