different between sadness vs lamenting

sadness

English

Etymology

From Middle English sadnesse, equivalent to sad +? -ness.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /?sædn?s/

Noun

sadness (countable and uncountable, plural sadnesses)

  1. (uncountable) The state or emotion of being sad.
    Synonyms: forlornness, melancholy
  2. (countable) An event in one's life that causes sadness.
    Synonyms: misfortune, woe

Translations

sadness From the web:

  • what sadness lengthens romeo's hours
  • what sadness anywhere is sadness
  • what sadness feels like
  • what sadness looks like
  • what sadness does to your body
  • what sadness is referred to here in the poem
  • what sadness means
  • what sadness valli


lamenting

English

Verb

lamenting

  1. present participle of lament

Noun

lamenting (plural lamentings)

  1. Lamentation.
    • 1577, Timothy Kendall (translator), “The song of S. Ierome in the deseit” in Flowers of Epigrammes, London: John Shepperd,[1]
      If gronyngs greate, get grace at God,
      and loude lamentyngs, loue:
      I hope my piteous pearcyng plaintes,
      shall God to mercie moue.
    • c. 1605, William Shakespeare, Macbeth, Act II, Scene 3,[2]
      The night has been unruly: where we lay,
      Our chimneys were blown down; and, as they say,
      Lamentings heard i’ th’ air, strange screams of death []
    • 1774, Thomas Hull, Henry the Second: or, the Fall of Rosamund, London: John Bell, Act IV, p. 48,[3]
      Lose not the Moments
      In vain Lamentings o’er Mischances past:
      One Project foil’d, another should be try’d,

Anagrams

  • alignment, gintleman, manteling

lamenting From the web:

  • what lamenting means
  • lamenting what does that mean
  • what is lamenting in the bible
  • what does lamenting mean in the bible
  • what is lamenting sacrifice weak to
  • what do lamenting mean
  • what is lamenting
  • what does lamenting mean in literature
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