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tragedy

[C/U] Both
pl: tragedies

This term carries a heavy emotional weight, evoking a sense of inevitable loss or a crushing blow from which there is no easy recovery. It is used for events that feel disproportionately cruel or devastating, such as the death of a child or a massive natural disaster, rather than simple accidents or inconveniences. In a literary sense, it describes a specific structural arc where a noble protagonist falls from grace due to a fatal flaw. While a sad story is merely unhappy, a tragedy implies a profound waste of potential or a cosmic injustice that leaves the audience feeling a mixture of pity and terror.

Countable when referring to a specific disastrous event or a specific dramatic play. Uncountable when discussing the general concept of human suffering and misery.

Meanings

Noun

An event causing great suffering, destruction, and distress.

"The sudden earthquake was a national tragedy."

Noun

A play or movie dealing with tragic events and having an unhappy ending.

"Sophocles wrote some of the most influential tragedies of ancient Greece."

Last Updated: May 27, 2026Report an Error