sorry

/ˈsɑɹ.i/

UK: /ˈsɒɹ.i/

SⱭɹ · i (2 syllables)

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Definition

Regretful or apologetic for one's actions.

Etymology

From Middle English sory, from Old English sāriġ (“feeling or expressing grief, sorry, grieved, sorrowful, sad, mournful, bitter”), from Proto-West Germanic *sairag, from Proto-Germanic *sairagaz (“sad”), from Proto-Indo-European *seh₂yro (“hard, rough, painful”). Cognate with Scots sairie (“sad, grieved”), Saterland Frisian seerich (“sore, inflamed”), West Frisian searich (“sad, sorry”), Low German serig (“sick, scabby”), German dialectal sehrig (“sore, sad, painful”), Swedish sårig. By surface analysis, sor(e) + -y. Unrelated to sorrow despite the similarity in form and meaning.

Example Sentences

  • "I am sorry I stepped on your toes. It was an accident."
  • "I feel sorry for you, about your exam results."
  • "The President was sorry to hear that the Ambassador was leaving."
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