|
GRIEF |
Mourning |
|
BEREAVEMENT |
Mourning |
|
GREET |
Mourning. |
|
LAMENT |
Song of mourning |
|
|
ARMBANDS |
Mourning sleeve accessories |
|
DIRGE |
Song of mourning |
|
ELEGY |
Song of mourning |
|
WAYMENT |
Grief; lamentation; mourning. |
|
|
CONDOLEMENT |
Sorrow; mourning; lamentation. |
|
MOURNINGLY |
In a mourning manner. |
|
NURSINGHOME |
Health facility is ruined. He's mourning |
|
WEEDY |
Dressed in weeds, or mourning garments. |
|
DOMINO |
A mourning veil formerly worn by women. |
|
BLACK |
Mourning garments of a black color; funereal drapery. |
|
LAMENTABLE |
Mourning; sorrowful; expressing grief; as, a lamentable
countenance. |
|
SABLE |
A mourning garment; a funeral robe; -- generally in the
plural. |
|
WEEPER |
A white band or border worn on the sleeve as a badge of
mourning. |
|
HATBAND |
A band round the crown of a hat; sometimes, a band of
black cloth, crape, etc., worn as a badge of mourning. |
|
COCKBILL |
To tilt up one end of so as to make almost vertical;
as, to cockbill the yards as a sign of mourning. |
|
HALF-MAST |
A point some distance below the top of a mast or staff;
as, a flag a half-mast (a token of mourning, etc.). |
|
BOMBAZINE |
A twilled fabric for dresses, of which the warp is silk,
and the weft worsted. Black bombazine has been much used for mourning
garments. |
|
SACKCLOTH |
Linen or cotton cloth such as sacks are made of; coarse
cloth; anciently, a cloth or garment worn in mourning, distress,
mortification, or penitence. |
|
MOURNFUL |
Full of sorrow; expressing, or intended to express,
sorrow; mourning; grieving; sad; also, causing sorrow; saddening;
grievous; as, a mournful person; mournful looks, tones, loss. |
|
CYPRUS |
A thin, transparent stuff, the same as, or corresponding
to, crape. It was either white or black, the latter being most common,
and used for mourning. |
|
TURTLEDOVE |
Any one of several species of pigeons more or less
resembling the true turtledoves, as the American mourning dove (see
under Dove), and the Australian turtledove (Stictopelia cuneata). |