n Try:His woe was almost beyond description.
his woe was beond description! Hope i helped!?!
The book of Luke would probably have used the Greek word for "woe". In Hebrew: Woe (noun) = tsa'ar (צער) Woe (interjection) = hoy (הוי) "woe is me" = oy li (אוי לי)
Used to express sorrow or dismay The thought of the coming exam filled him with woe. A damaging hurricane was yet another woe faced by the coastal town.
It is pronounced to rhyme with Joe, or phonetically; wuh-oh, woe. Proper usage would be "Woe is me, for my father died this morning." It is an older word, not much in use in today's society. It is more commonly used in Shakespeare's works.
Ummm, Woe to you... (?) meaning shame on you (i think.)
woe - misery resulting from affliction
suffering? or depressed?
woe
The word "woe" is in the King James Version of the Bible 106 times. It is in 98 verses.
To change "woe" to a noun, you simply use it as is. "Woe" is already a noun, meaning great sorrow or distress.
woe be gone
woe