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Synonyms
re·gret (rĭ-grĕt́)

[Middle English regretten, to lament, from Old French regreter, re-, re-, + -greter, to weep (perhaps of Germanic origin).]

verb: -gret·ted, -gret·ting, -grets. 

transitive verb 

  1. To feel sorry, disappointed, or distressed about.
  2. To remember with a feeling of loss or sorrow; mourn.

intransitive verb 

To feel regret.

noun 

  1. A sense of loss and longing for someone or something gone.
  2. A feeling of disappointment or distress about something that one wishes could be different.
  3. A courteous expression of regret, especially at having to decline an invitation.

derivatives

re·gret́ter
noun

synonyms:

regret, sorrow, grief, anguish, woe, heartache, heartbreak These nouns denote mental distress. Regret has the broadest range, from mere disappointment to a painful sense of dissatisfaction or self-reproach, as over something lost or done: She looked back with regret on the pain she had caused her family. Sorrow connotes sadness caused by misfortune, affliction, or loss; it can also imply contrition: “sorrow for his … children, who needed his protection, and whom he could not protect” (James Baldwin) Grief is deep, acute personal sorrow, as that arising from irreplaceable loss: “Grief fills the room up of my absent child,/Lies in his bed, walks up and down with me” (Shakespeare) Anguish implies agonizing, excruciating mental pain: “I pray that our heavenly Father may assuage the anguish of your bereavement” (Abraham Lincoln) Woe is intense, often prolonged wretchedness or misery: “the deep, unutterable woe/Which none save exiles feel” (W.E. Aytoun) Heartache most often applies to sustained private sorrow: The child's difficulties are a source of heartache to the parents. Heartbreak is overwhelming grief: “Better a little chiding than a great deal of heartbreak” (Shakespeare)