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Definition of weep verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

weep

verb
 
/wiːp/
 
/wiːp/
Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they weep
 
/wiːp/
 
/wiːp/
he / she / it weeps
 
/wiːps/
 
/wiːps/
past simple wept
 
/wept/
 
/wept/
past participle wept
 
/wept/
 
/wept/
-ing form weeping
 
/ˈwiːpɪŋ/
 
/ˈwiːpɪŋ/
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  1. [intransitive, transitive] (formal or literary) to cry, usually because you are sad
    • She started to weep uncontrollably.
    • I could have wept (= I was sad enough to cry) thinking about what I'd missed.
    • weep for/with something He wept for joy.
    • weep at/over something I do not weep over his death.
    • weep something She wept bitter tears of disappointment.
    • weep to do something I wept to see him looking so sick.
    • + speech ‘I'm so unhappy!’ she wept.
    Extra Examples
    • He wanted to weep at the unfairness of it all.
    • He was weeping, in effect, for a lost age of innocence.
    • His grandmother was weeping uncontrollably.
    • I felt I could have wept for joy.
    • Several of the soldiers broke down and wept.
    • She almost wept with happiness.
    • The mourners followed the funeral procession, weeping and wailing.
    • The people wept openly when his death was announced.
    • We had wept over the death of our parents.
    • weeping for someone who has died
    Topics Feelingsc1
    Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb
    • quietly
    • silently
    • softly
    verb + weep
    • begin to
    • start to
    • want to
    preposition
    • at
    • for
    • over
    phrases
    • break down and weep
    • weep and wail
    • weep buckets
    See full entry
  2. [intransitive] (usually used in the progressive tenses) (of a wound) to produce liquid
    • His legs were covered with weeping sores (= that had not healed).
  3. Word OriginOld English wēpan (verb), of Germanic origin, probably imitative.
See weep in the Oxford Advanced American Dictionary

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