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Compassion

[kəmˈpæʃən] · kum-PASH-un · English · noun
mixedintensity: hightrustsadness

Sympathetic awareness of another's suffering joined to a desire to relieve it.

Definition

Sympathetic awareness of another's suffering joined to a desire to relieve it — literally “a suffering with.”

Connotation & usage

The action-oriented member: it adds to the shared or felt awareness of another's distress an urgent desire to help (“pity coupled with an urgent desire to aid or to spare”). On the standard ladder — pity < commiseration < sympathy < compassion — it is the warmest and most morally weighted, and unlike empathy it need not mean absorbing the other's feelings, only valuing their concern enough to act.

Related words

Etymology

Mid-14c., literally “a suffering with another,” from Latin compati “to feel pity” (com- “with” + pati “to suffer”). Latin compassio is a calque of Greek sympatheia.

How it has changed

In use since the 14th century, once able to mean a literal sharing of another's affliction; the core sense (sorrow at another's suffering plus a desire to relieve it) has been stable. (The compound “compassion fatigue” is a modern coinage but doesn't change the base word.) No reliable recent-generation shift.

Sources

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From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.