ADJECTIVE
-
deserving a curse; sometimes used as an intensifier
I'll be cursed if I can see your reasoning
not a cursed drop
his cursed stupidity
villagers shun the area believing it to be cursed
cursed with four daughter
How To Use curst In A Sentence
- I've no doubt the two of you have been ill-fortuned enough to've heard that curst song of Brandark's?
- The mighty chief, atheling excellent, unblithe sat, labored in woe for the loss of his thanes, when once had been traced the trail of the fiend, spirit accurst: too cruel that sorrow, too long, too loathsome. Beowulf, translated by Francis Gummere
- She swung the sword at him, praying she could actually use the curst thing. How to Woo a Reluctant Lady
- Good sooth, it is a day accurst, thy slaughter-day The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
- Without the will of heaven none is blest, none curst, I do maintain; nor doth the same house for ever tread the path of bliss; for one kind of fortune follows hard upon another; one man it brings to naught from his high estate, another though of no account it crowns with happiness. The Heracleidae
- Ah, woe for him! whose fortune was e'er so curst as his? Heracles
- Her curst husband actually had the nerve to laugh. How to Woo a Reluctant Lady
- You lie, in faith; for you are call'd plain Kate, and bonny Kate and sometimes Kate the curst; but Kate, the prettiest Kate in Christendom.
- ‘I'll be waking you in four hours,’ he rumbled, ‘so you'd best not lie awake thinking of more verses for your curst song!’
- What began best can't end worst, nor what God once blest prove accurst. Morality as a Religion An exposition of some first principles