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Grief

[ɡriːf] · greef · English · noun
negativeintensity: highsadness

Keen, piercing distress in the wake of loss.

Definition

Keen, piercing distress in the wake of loss — at its core the raw sorrow of bereavement.

Connotation & usage

The acute, bereavement-centered member: poignant sorrow for an immediate cause. Two cues set it apart — immediacy (the keen, present-tense pang, where sorrow is broader and quieter) and cause (prototypically death/loss). The crucial pairing is with mourning: grief is the inward felt emotion, mourning its outward expression and customs. Anguish is grief intensified to agony. Note the lighter colloquial sense “trouble” (“good grief,” “give someone grief”), separate from the emotional core.

Related words

Etymology

Literal root is “heaviness.” Early 13c. “hardship, suffering,” from Old French grief, from Latin gravare “make heavy; cause grief,” from gravis “weighty,” from PIE *gwere- “heavy” (the root of gravity, grave). The “mental pain, sorrow” sense is from c. 1300.

How it has changed

A clear shift from physical “heaviness, hardship, burden” to internal “sorrow” by c. 1300. “Good grief” dates to 1912; the colloquial “trouble/annoyance” senses are later and informal. No reliable recent-generation reversal of the core meaning.

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.