Weal (In this instance) well-being, prosperity, or happiness (not a welt)
Woe Misery resulting from affliction Intense mournfulness
No, 'woe' is only a noun.
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.
Woe means sorrow or grief. It is not a "bad" word.
-ful to get woeful- meaning sad and sorrowful
plaintive meaning expressive of suffering or woe
woe be gone
woe
No, 'woe' is only a noun.
Ummm, Woe to you... (?) meaning shame on you (i think.)
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)
woe - misery resulting from affliction
To change "woe" to a noun, you simply use it as is. "Woe" is already a noun, meaning great sorrow or distress.
suffering? or depressed?
woe
The word "woe" is in the King James Version of the Bible 106 times. It is in 98 verses.
n Try:His woe was almost beyond description.
woe