This list covers 38 negative words, ranging alphabetically from “Gall” to “Gutless.” These words describe unpleasant traits, moods, and behaviors, from greed and guilt to grumpiness and gaslighting. People use them in everyday conversation, writing, and storytelling to call out flaws, criticize bad behavior, or capture a dark mood.
Negative words are terms that carry an unfavorable or critical meaning, often describing traits, actions, or feelings people see as harmful or unpleasant. Many of these words, like “gaslight,” started as specific references (in this case, a 1938 stage play) before becoming everyday terms for manipulation. They show up constantly in fiction, journalism, and casual speech whenever someone needs to describe a flaw sharply and clearly.
Below you’ll find the table with Word, Part of Speech, Definition, Example Usage, and Description.
Word: shows the exact negative word being defined, so you can quickly scan the full list and find the one you need.
Part of Speech: tells you whether the word functions as a noun, verb, adjective, or another grammatical role in a sentence.
Definition: gives you a short, clear explanation of what the word means, so you understand it at a glance.
Example Usage: shows the word in a real sentence, helping you see how to use it naturally in your own writing or speech.
Description: offers extra context on tone, connotation, or common situations where the word applies, so you can use it more confidently.
Negative words
| Word | Part of Speech | Definition | Example Usage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gall | noun | bold, rude, disrespectful behavior | “He had the gall to blame her for his mistake.” |
| Garish | adjective | obtrusively bright and showy; tastelessly loud in color or design | “The hotel lobby was decorated in garish neon colors.” |
| Gaudy | adjective | extravagantly bright or showy, typically in a tasteless way | “She wore a gaudy gold necklace with fake jewels.” |
| Gaslight | verb | to manipulate someone into doubting their own perception of reality | “He tried to gaslight her into thinking she imagined the argument.” |
| Ghastly | adjective | shockingly frightful or dreadful; horrible | “The car accident left a ghastly scene on the highway.” |
| Ghoulish | adjective | showing morbid interest in death or disaster | “The tabloid ran a ghoulish story about the tragedy.” |
| Glib | adjective | fluent and voluble but insincere or superficial | “His glib excuses fooled no one.” |
| Gloomy | adjective | dark or dismal; feeling or causing depression | “The weather matched her gloomy mood after the breakup.” |
| Glum | adjective | sullen and gloomy; morose | “He sat in the corner looking glum all evening.” |
| Gnarly | adjective (slang) | unpleasant, difficult, or disgusting | “That’s a gnarly wound, you should see a doctor.” |
| Goad | verb | to provoke or annoy someone into doing something | “His friends goaded him into starting the fight.” |
| Gossip | noun/verb | casual talk about others, often unverified or malicious | “The office gossip spread false rumors about her promotion.” |
| Graceless | adjective | lacking elegance, charm, or tact | “His graceless comment embarrassed everyone at the table.” |
| Grasping | adjective | excessively greedy or acquisitive | “The grasping landlord raised rent every year without improving the property.” |
| Grating | adjective | irritating or unpleasant, especially a sound or manner | “His grating voice made the meeting unbearable.” |
| Grave | adjective | giving cause for alarm; serious or solemn in a negative sense | “The doctor delivered grave news about his prognosis.” |
| Greed | noun | intense and selfish desire for wealth or power | “Greed drove him to cheat his own business partners.” |
| Greedy | adjective | having excessive desire for wealth or possessions | “The greedy executive pocketed the bonus meant for his staff.” |
| Grief | noun | deep sorrow, especially caused by loss | “Grief overwhelmed her after her father’s passing.” |
| Grievance | noun | a real or imagined cause for complaint | “Employees filed a grievance over unsafe working conditions.” |
| Grievous | adjective | very severe or serious; causing grief or suffering | “He suffered grievous injuries in the crash.” |
| Grim | adjective | forbidding or uninviting; harsh or joyless | “The grim reality of unemployment hit the town hard.” |
| Grimace | noun/verb | a twisted facial expression of pain or disgust | “She grimaced at the foul smell coming from the fridge.” |
| Gripe | noun/verb | a complaint, especially a trivial or persistent one | “His constant gripes about the weather annoyed his coworkers.” |
| Gross | adjective | disgusting or repulsive | “The moldy leftovers in the fridge were gross.” |
| Grotesque | adjective | comically or repulsively distorted or ugly | “The horror movie featured grotesque monster designs.” |
| Grouch | noun | a habitually complaining or bad-tempered person | “Don’t mind him, he’s just an old grouch in the mornings.” |
| Grouchy | adjective | bad-tempered and irritable | “He gets grouchy if he skips his morning coffee.” |
| Grudge | noun | a persistent feeling of ill will or resentment | “She still holds a grudge from their argument years ago.” |
| Gruesome | adjective | causing horror or disgust; grisly | “The crime scene photos were absolutely gruesome.” |
| Gruff | adjective | rough or stern in manner; abrupt | “The gruff old man barked orders at the new recruits.” |
| Grumble | verb | to complain in a low, muttering tone | “He grumbled about the traffic the entire drive.” |
| Grumpy | adjective | bad-tempered and irritable | “He’s always grumpy before he’s had his coffee.” |
| Guile | noun | sly or cunning intelligence used to deceive | “He used guile to trick investors out of their savings.” |
| Guilt | noun | remorseful awareness of having done wrong | “Guilt kept him awake after he lied to his best friend.” |
| Guilty | adjective | responsible for a crime or wrongdoing; feeling guilt | “She felt guilty for forgetting her friend’s birthday.” |
| Gullible | adjective | easily deceived or tricked | “He’s so gullible he believed the obvious scam email.” |
| Gutless | adjective | lacking courage; cowardly | “It was a gutless move to blame his teammate for the loss.” |