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MISFORTUNE |
Woe |
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ALAS |
Woe! |
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WAVE |
Woe. |
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POTHOLE |
Motorist’s woe |
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MISERY |
Great woe |
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DESPAIR |
Great woe |
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WO |
See Woe. |
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LAMENT |
Tale of woe |
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CASSANDRA |
Prophetess of woe |
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WAIL |
Cry of woe |
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PINE |
Woe; torment; pain. |
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OUTWOE |
To exceed in woe. |
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COBWEB |
Recluse’s home demolished, BBC woe |
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SORROW |
First sadness or regret, rue or woe |
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WHOA |
Exclamation of woe could stop Black Beauty, for example |
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BANE |
Any cause of ruin, or lasting injury; harm; woe. |
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BEGONE |
Surrounded; furnished; beset; environed (as in
woe-begone). |
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OPPRESSIVE |
Heavy; overpowering; hard to be borne; as, oppressive
grief or woe. |
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WOE-BEGONE |
Beset or overwhelmed with woe; immersed in grief or
sorrow; woeful. |
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WOFUL |
Full of woe; sorrowful; distressed with grief or calamity;
afflicted; wretched; unhappy; sad. |
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BETIDE |
To happen to; to befall; to come to ; as, woe betide the
wanderer. |
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DELUGE |
...spread;
to overpower; to submerge; to destroy; as, the northern nations deluged
the Roman empire with their armies; the land is deluged with woe... |
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WORTH |
To be; to become; to betide; -- now used only in the
phrases, woe worth the day, woe worth the man, etc., in which the verb
is in the imperativ... |
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STRAIN |
...spoke in a noble strain; there was
a strain of woe in his story; a strain of trickery appears in his
career. ... |