Sentence examples for to deplore from inspiring English sources

Dictionary

to deplore

verb

To bewail; to weep bitterly over; to feel sorrow for.

  • I deplore my neighbour for having lost his job.

Exact(58)

But if humanity is gone, and there is nobody left to deplore our era, that doesn't make us any less deplorable".

Is Eva right to deplore the practice?

But there's also much to deplore.

It is the summit of idleness to deplore the present, to deplore actuality.

Aren't Republicans supposed to deplore the politics of victimhood?

But to deplore endings is a commonplace of criticism.

It's as silly to deplore nasty criticism as it is to deplore snark or wit or sarcasm or just plain crankiness.

THOSE who claim to deplore the commercialisation of Christmas should move to Venezuela.

Nothing about Stanford seemed too insignificant for the British papers to deplore.

In retrospect, the cowboy brouhaha was like the weather: something ephemeral to deplore.

In this regard, we find much to admire in Darwin and much to deplore in Freud.

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