English edit

Alternative forms edit

Etymology edit

From grieve +‎ -some.

Adjective edit

grievesome (comparative more grievesome, superlative most grievesome)

  1. Marked by grief or grieving; grievous
    • 1989, Ira Sadoff, Emotional Traffic:
      One instrument is plaintive, grievesome, high pitched: a little boy's whine.
    • 2004, Harun Yahya, The Hypocrite According To The Qur’an:
      What hypocrites will be confronted with, in return for their hypocrisy, is a grievesome torment, both in this world and beyond.
    • 2013, Elizabeth Lister, Nothing Stays the Same:
      'I can't thank you enough for the lovely time I've had with you. Yes, it has been a lovely time. I thought it would be a sad and grieve-some period but it's been really enjoyable.
    • 2015, Uriah Kriegel, The Varieties of Consciousness:
      But for my part, I find it impossible to imagine a grief with no awareness of a grievesome event, exhausted entirely by bodily sensations.

See also edit