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woeful
/ ˈwəʊfəl /
adjective
- expressing or characterized by sorrow
- bringing or causing woe
- pitiful; miserable
a woeful standard of work
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Derived Forms
- ˈwoefulness, noun
- ˈwoefully, adverb
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Other Words From
- woe·ful·ly adverb
- woe·ful·ness noun
- un·woe·ful adjective
- un·woe·ful·ness noun
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Word History and Origins
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Example Sentences
And its woeful end is a reminder that the U.S. has few good options in its attempts to bring American prisoners home.
It operated a fleet of very old airplanes and had such a woeful safety record that FAA inspectors wanted to ground it.
In much of the DRC, roads are in a woeful state of disrepair, and in Goma, the conditions are especially dire.
The Romanov tsars imposed rigid serfdom just as that woeful institution was fading almost everywhere else.
I sat in a suite at the Savoy hotel, in privilege, resenting the woeful ratbag I once was who, for all his problems, had drugs.
Down the long corridors the wind mysteriously whispered, rising in inarticulate moanings and woeful sighs, as of souls in pain.
You didnt know that I was born under a lucky star despite all my woeful past.
He put on a woeful face, pushed open the door, and went up to the counter, where the landlord still was.
And yet the latter days of this great-souled man were a woeful tragedy.
The sorrow of his life was his most woeful, disastrous marriage.
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