sorrow
/ˈsɑɹ.oʊ/
UK: /ˈsɒɹ.əʊ/
SⱭɹ · oʊ (2 syllables)
English
Noun Top 4,790
American (Lessac)
(medium)
Female
0.7s
American (Amy)
(medium)
Female
0.9s
American (Ryan)
(medium)
Male
0.5s
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Definition
unhappiness, woe
Etymology
From Middle English sorwe, sorow, sorewe, from Old English sorg, sorh (“care, anxiety, sorrow, grief”), from Proto-West Germanic *sorgu, from Proto-Germanic *surgō (compare West Frisian soarch, Dutch zorg, German Sorge, Danish, Swedish and Norwegian sorg), from Proto-Indo-European *swergʰ- (“watch over, worry; be ill, suffer”) (compare Old Irish serg (“sickness”), Tocharian B sark (“sickness”), Lithuanian sirgti (“be sick”), Sanskrit सूर्क्षति (sū́rkṣati, “worry”). Despite the similarity in form and meaning, not historically related to sorry and sore.
Example Sentences
- "But sorrow that is couch'd in seeming gladness Is like that mirth fate turns to sudden sadness."
- "The safe and general antidote against sorrow is employment."
- "Beijing’s bureaucrats may claim they are preventing fires, but what they are really igniting is resentment, sorrow, and resistance. The flames they lit were consuming trust, dignity, and the fragile hope that religious freedom might one day be respected in Tibet."
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