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weepy
/ ˈwiːpɪ /
adjective
- liable or tending to weep
noun
- a romantic and sentimental film or book
Derived Forms
- ˈweepiness, noun
- ˈweepily, adverb
Other Words From
- weepi·ness noun
Example Sentences
During the day, weepy and drained, I grappled to find a balance between keeping informed of the latest news and tending to my mental health.
Contrary to that weepy court testimony, Rittenhouse mostly spoke with a calm voice as he swung at Carlson’s softballs.
I ran outside, then did burpees inside, then shuffled along to Billy Blanks’s delightful quarantine workouts, and finally I laid around for a couple of months, weepy and lost.
“My character was only intended to be in the pilot, and started out very weepy and pining for Archer,” says Greer.
Newt Gingrich may talk a tough game, but in December the former speaker of the House got weepy when asked about his mother.
After discussing his political legacy, Bush talked about his family—and got weepy.
The tone is reminiscent of a weepy young girl used to being able to get her way.
Among a large group of younger fans, he will always be best known for his role in the weepy The Notebook.
We had a weepy dinner and Mom and Dad had each had a couple glasses of wine, which was a lot for them.
It had been on of those dull, weepy days when a sullen drizzle clouded sky and earth.
To a weepy-waily woman he would have offered the same courtesies, but she would not have drawn his thoughts in any manner.
"I'm not sure if I don't feel a little bit weepy myself," said Maisie Talbot.
Miss De Voe's life and surroundings were not exactly weepy ones, and when tears came they meant much.
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