Jeremiah wept because he saw the destruction and suffering that would come upon his people due to their disobedience to God.
The past tense of weep is wept, and the future tense is will weep.
Jeremiah is commonly known as the "weeping prophet," based on his wish to have a "fountain of tears" with which he might weep for the slain of his own people and the last prophet that God sent to preach to the southern kingdom, which comprised the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. The book Jeremiah is commonly known as the "weeping prophet," based on his wish to have a "fountain of tears" with which he might weep for the slain of his own people and the last prophet that God sent to preach to the southern kingdom, which comprised the tribes of Judah and Benjamin. The book Jeremiah and the book of Lamentations were written by Jeremiah. He wrote it to describe the terrible destruction of Jerusalem. Some have described Lamentations as "a funeral dirge for Jerusalem." In the Greek translation of the Old Testament, which was made in the third century before Christ, Lamentations is called "The Tears of Jeremiah." Each of the five chapters of Lamentations is a poem. It shows clearly that God will punish even His own people if they do not repent of their sins. After he became a prophet, he whipped most if his life.
A homophone for "weep" is "wheat."
Fish do not weep
Weeped is the past participle of weep
we can weep because we have tear ducts in our eyes!
yes
WEEP - defunct - was created in 1936.
Of Nightingales That Weep was created in 1974.
Willow Weep for Me was created in 1964.
The present participle of weep is weeping.
to sob or cry is to weep