woesome
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]Adjective
[edit]woesome (comparative more woesome, superlative most woesome)
- Characterised or marked by woe; woeful
- c. 1765, John Langhorne, Owen of Carron:
- 'But it will make thee much bewail, / And it will make thy fair eye swell—' / She said, and told the woesome tale, / As sooth as shepherdess might tell.
- 2008, Frances Hodgson Burnett, The White People:
- I could not help seeing a woesome picture. “Poor little soul, with the blood pouring from her heart and her brown hair spread over her dead father's breast!”
- 2011, Jan Tucker Mulligan, Smuggler's Legacy:
- Nicole caught her breath at the muffled, woesome sighs: Douanier-Lieutenant Peder LaMotte, Acting Capitaine of Concarneau, her love and her father's nemesis, was weeping.
- 2014, Glenda Paisley, My Life in Poetry:
- To dissect my thoughts is a woesome tale [...]
- 2016, Jack Kerouac, Desolation Angels:
- But here comes woesome old me and my maw down the yard with battered suitcases arriving almost like phantoms dripping from the sea.