This is one of those words in English that the single and plural is the same word.
The plural from of grief is grieves.
There is no plural form of "grief" If it was a verb it might be "grieves" but not for nouns
Yes, because it it saying that grief is a storm.
grief, distress, guilt, repentance
Good grief would be "bonté divine" in French.
The plural from of grief is grieves.
There is no plural form of "grief" If it was a verb it might be "grieves" but not for nouns
There is no plural for "grief" (a state of sadness after a tragedy or loss). The verb form "to grieve" does have a present-tense, third-person singular conjugation "he grieves".
I am filling with grief. Grief is all I feel. We were in deep grief.
No. Grief is a noun, although it can be used as an adjunct with other nouns (grief counselor). Adjectives associated with grief are grieving and grief-stricken.
with grief
The answer to the riddle is brief grief
Brief grief.
grief and sadness
grief and sadness
Grief over the loss of a loved one sounds better.
"the family was stricken with grief" or "She had a great deal of grief over the loss of her husband"