lamentation
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Recorded since 1375, from Latin lāmentātiō (“wailing, moaning, weeping”), from the deponent verb lāmentor, from lāmentum (“wail; wailing”), itself from a Proto-Indo-European *leh₂- (“to howl”), presumed ultimately imitative. Replaced Old English cwiþan. Lament is a 16th-century back-formation.
lamentation (countable and uncountable, plural lamentations)
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Inherited from Middle French, from Latin lāmentātiōnem (“wailing, moaning, weeping”).
lamentation f (plural lamentations)
From Latin lāmentātiō (“wailing, moaning, weeping”).
lamentation f (plural lamentations)
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