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Gomorrah
[ guh-mawr-uh, -mor-uh ]
noun
- Also Douay Bible, Gomorrha. (in the Bible) an ancient city destroyed, with Sodom, because of its wickedness.
- any extremely wicked place.
Gomorrah
/ ɡəˈmɒrə /
noun
- Old Testament one of two ancient cities near the Dead Sea, the other being Sodom, that were destroyed by God as a punishment for the wickedness of their inhabitants (Genesis 19:24)
- any place notorious for vice and depravity
Derived Forms
- Goˈmorrean, adjective
Other Words From
- Go·mor·re·an adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of Gomorrah1
Example Sentences
Where one conservative commentator sees Sodom and Gomorrah, data and trends paint a different picture.
I felt making this film there were a lot of things from “Gomorrah” in it, and also a lot of things from “Pinocchio.”
Best known for his influential crime saga “Gomorrah,” Garrone wrote the screenplay based on real-life accounts from multiple individuals who survived to tell their tale of unfathomable perseverance.
When I think of “Gomorrah,” his 2008 drama about a Neapolitan criminal syndicate, I immediately re-see the shot of two dead teenagers in the bucket of a bulldozer — a grotesque Pietà.
In between the sections, there are extracts from Name the Day, many of them posts from OneCorn, a frequent user who often writes about Genesis — especially the stories of Sodom and Gomorrah, Abraham and Lot.
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