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weeper
[ wee-per ]
noun
- (formerly) a hired mourner at a funeral.
- something worn as a badge of mourning, as a widow's black veil.
- a wine bottle that has lost some of its contents through the cork.
- any of various loose-hanging, streamerlike objects, as a long, hanging hatband or a strand of moss hanging from a tree.
- Informal. a sad story, motion picture, song, or the like, that is apt to make one cry.
weeper
/ ˈwiːpə /
noun
- a person who weeps, esp a hired mourner
- something worn as a sign of mourning
- a hole through a wall, to allow water to drain away
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
“There might even be some happy songs coming” — a surprise, perhaps, for a woman whose debut closes with a gorgeous barroom weeper called “Sad Songs for Sad People.”
As we will soon learn, George, a Midwestern farmer in late middle age, is stony and unsentimental, the opposite of a weeper.
I know I wasn't supposed to, but the second time I watched the emotionally disemboweling prestige weeper "Dear Edward," the Apple TV+ adaptation of Ann Napolitano's best-selling 2020 novel, I thought of Prince Harry.
Even if the rain abates, old asphalt is notoriously difficult to dry because of weepers — the moisture that collects under the surface and then seeps through the cracks after a rainfall.
My challenge for myself as a writer was to say, "Can I write about these things and have it not be a weeper?"
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