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1 bemitleiden
v/t feel sorry for, pity; sich selbst bemitleiden feel sorry for oneself* * *to pity; to have compassion on; to commiserate* * *be|mịt|lei|den [bə'mɪtlaidn] ptp bemi\#tleidetvtto pity, to feel pity for, to feel sorry forer ist zu bemitleiden — he is to be pitied
* * *1) (to express sympathy (with).) commiserate2) (to feel pity for (someone): She pitied him; She is to be pitied.) pity* * *be·mit·lei·den *[bəˈmɪtlaidn̩]vt▪ jdn \bemitleiden to pity sb, to feel pity [or sorry] for sbsie ist zu \bemitleiden she is to be pitied* * *transitives Verb pity; feel sorry for* * *bemitleiden v/t feel sorry for, pity;sich selbst bemitleiden feel sorry for oneself* * *transitives Verb pity; feel sorry for* * *v.to commiserate v.to pity v. -
2 Mitleid empfinden für
to commiserate -
3 bemitleiden
1. to commiserate2. to pity -
4 mitfühlen
См. также в других словарях:
Commiserate — Com*mis er*ate, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Commiserated}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Commiserating}.] [L. commiseratus, p. p. of commiserari to commiserate; com + miserari to pity. See {Miserable}.] To feel sorrow, pain, or regret for; to pity. [1913 Webster]… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
commiserate — c.1600, from L. commiseratus, pp. of commiserari to pity, bewail (see COMMISERATION (Cf. commiseration)). Related: Commiserated; commiserating. An O.E. loan translation of commiserate was efensargian … Etymology dictionary
commiserate — was a transitive verb for about three centuries: • She did not exult in her rival s fall, but, on the contrary, commiserated her H. Ainsworth, 1871 but under the influence of condole with and sympathize with, it is now construed with with… … Modern English usage
commiserate — index sympathize Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
commiserate — [v] listen to woes of another ache, compassionate, condole, console, feel, feel for, have mercy, pity, share sorrow, sympathize; concepts 110,596 Ant. be indifferent, turn away … New thesaurus
commiserate — ► VERB ▪ express sympathy or pity; sympathize. DERIVATIVES commiseration noun. ORIGIN Latin commiserari, from miserari to lament … English terms dictionary
commiserate — [kə miz′ər āt΄] vt. commiserated, commiserating [< L commiseratus, pp. of commiserari, to pity < com , intens. + miserari, to pity: see MISERY] to feel or show sorrow or pity for vi. to condole or sympathize (with) SYN. PITY commiseration n … English World dictionary
commiserate — v. (d; intr.) to commiserate on; with (I commiserate with you on your misfortune) * * * [kə mɪzəreɪt] with (I commiserate with you on your misfortune) (d; intr.) to commiserate on … Combinatory dictionary
commiserate — UK [kəˈmɪzəreɪt] / US [kəˈmɪzəˌreɪt] verb [intransitive] Word forms commiserate : present tense I/you/we/they commiserate he/she/it commiserates present participle commiserating past tense commiserated past participle commiserated to express… … English dictionary
commiserate — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. t. pity, condole. II (Roget s IV) v. Syn. share sorrow, condole, console, empathize; see pity 1 , sympathize . III (Roget s 3 Superthesaurus) (VOCABULARY WORD) v. [kuh MIZ uh RATE] to pity or feel… … English dictionary for students
commiserate — [[t]kəmɪ̱zəreɪt[/t]] commiserates, commiserating, commiserated VERB If you commiserate with someone, you show them pity or sympathy when something unpleasant has happened to them. [V with n] When I lost, he commiserated with me. Derived words:… … English dictionary