bad, woeful, wretched, worthy of severe condemnation.
Causing or being a subject for regret or grief as in 'the deplorable death of a friend.'
Or causing to be a subject for disapproval as in 'this room is in deplorable order.' A very bad state
The answer is predeplore
In the sentence, "I deplore ugly hats!" the word deplore is a verb; it is a transitive verb, carrying the direct object "hats". It is an action verb.
Deplored is the past tense of deplore.
No, "deplore" is a verb and cannot be used as a noun. It means to feel or express strong disapproval of something.
A connotation for "deplore" could be to strongly criticize or condemn something, implying a sense of strong disapproval or disgust.
deplore
To express disapproval of, to deplore something .
Used in a sentence - I deplore having to answer this question. Just kidding, it was a blast! Commonly used referring to a person because it's an emotion.
The past participle is deplored.
disapprove, deplore, dislike, veto, reject
Synonyms are- bewail, hate, disapprove of, abhor, and bemoan.
I deplore when people don't make an effort to use grammatical sentences.I have several more sentences for you.I deplore teaching you how to do your own homeworkThe teacher should deplore your cheating.I deplore your lack of effort.