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lachrymose
/ -ˌməʊz; ˈlækrɪˌməʊs; ˌlækrɪˈmɒsɪtɪ /
adjective
- given to weeping; tearful
- mournful; sad
Derived Forms
- lachrymosity, noun
- ˈlachryˌmosely, adverb
Other Words From
- lachry·mosely adverb
- lach·ry·mos·i·ty [lak-r, uh, -, mos, -i-tee], noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of lachrymose1
Word History and Origins
Origin of lachrymose1
Example Sentences
And all of this is somehow glommed on to the lachrymose story of a grieving parent and a dying world.
“He had this drawing that, without calling attention to itself, without being lachrymose, but with a set of Boothisms that the reader understood, just moved me. So that, I could do,” Remnick adds.
Roberts’s lachrymose gay novel is nine years overdue in becoming a sensation here.
He has come out on the other side of two of the most painful, lachrymose years that any entrepreneur could imagine, with self-inflicted wounds and schadenfreude galore.
“I’ve noticed that the TV commercials have gone from lachrymose, piano-dribbling quarantine themes to something more open and optimistic,” writes Glenn Reynolds, founder of Instapundit, the political and culture news site.
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