pathetic

pathetic
01. My tennis serve is [pathetic]; I really have to work on it.
02. The baby was sick for the first few days after it was born, and was [pathetically] small and weak.
03. The little dog looked [pathetic] waiting outside in the pouring rain.
04. Helen Keller once said that the most [pathetic] person in the world is someone who has sight, but has no vision.
05. The teacher dismissed the student's excuses as [pathetic], and gave him a zero for failing to meet the deadline for his final essay.
06. The young boy had a [pathetic] look of sadness on his face after the girl declined his invitation to the dance.
07. The kittens mewed [pathetically] for their mother.
08. He looked really [pathetic] stumbling around drunk at the party, trying to hit on girls.
09. The little dog looked [pathetic] sitting out in the pouring rain.
10. Your excuses for losing today are [pathetic]. You lost because you didn't put in enough effort and you didn't play as a team.
11. The homeless men were crowded [pathetically] together, trying to keep warm in the winter evening.
12. My grandmother was [pathetically] thin in the final weeks before her death.
13. Stop whining about how hard your life is, you sound [pathetic].
14. The young girl woke up, and cried [pathetically] for her dead mother.
15. He made a [pathetic] attempt to win his old girlfriend back, but she was totally uninterested in having anything to do with him.

Grammatical examples in English. 2013.

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  • Pathetic — Pa*thet ic, a. [L. patheticus, Gr. ?, fr. ?, ?, to suffer: cf. F. path[ e]tique. See {Pathos}.] 1. Expressing or showing anger; passionate. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] 2. Affecting or moving the tender emotions, esp. pity or grief; full of pathos; as,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • pathetic — [pə thet′ik] adj. [LL patheticus < Gr pathētikos, akin to pathos, suffering, PATHOS] 1. expressing, arousing, or intended to arouse pity, sorrow, sympathy, or compassion; pitiful 2. pitifully unsuccessful, ineffective, etc. [a pathetic… …   English World dictionary

  • pathetic — (adj.) 1590s, affecting the emotions, exciting the passions, from M.Fr. pathétique moving, stirring, affecting (16c.), from L.L. patheticus, from Gk. pathetikos sensitive, capable of emotion, from pathetos liable to suffer, verbal adj. of pathein …   Etymology dictionary

  • pathetic — in its modern informal meaning ‘inadequate, feeble’, has compromised the primary (and by no means derogatory) meaning ‘arousing pity or sadness’ to the extent that a statement such as The play opens with a pathetic speech is likely to be… …   Modern English usage

  • pathetic — index deplorable, disconsolate, lamentable, paltry Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • pathetic — poignant, affecting, *moving, touching, impressive Analogous words: *pitiful, piteous, pitiable: plaintive, *melancholy, doleful Antonyms: comical …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • pathetic — [adj] sad, affecting commiserable, deplorable, distressing, feeble, heartbreaking, heartrending*, inadequate, lamentable, meager, melting, miserable, moving, paltry, petty, piteous, pitiable, pitiful, plaintive, poignant, poor, puny, rueful,… …   New thesaurus

  • pathetic — ► ADJECTIVE 1) arousing pity. 2) informal miserably inadequate. 3) archaic relating to the emotions. DERIVATIVES pathetically adverb. ORIGIN Greek path tikos sensitive , from pathos suffering …   English terms dictionary

  • -pathetic — or pathic adj combining form • • • Main Entry: ↑ path …   Useful english dictionary

  • pathetic — [[t]pəθe̱tɪk[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED If you describe a person or animal as pathetic, you mean that they are sad and weak or helpless, and they make you feel very sorry for them. ...a pathetic little dog with a curly tail... The small group of… …   English dictionary

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