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  1. Dictionary
    Sym·pa·thy
    /ˈsimpəTHē/

    noun

  2. Sympathy is a feeling of sincere concern for someone who is experiencing something difficult or painful. Empathy involves actively sharing in the person’s emotional experience. Sympathy has been in use since the 16th century.

  3. Sympathy most commonly means the sharing of emotions with someone else, especially sadness. This is usually understood to mean that you feel bad for them because they are in a negative situation. Sympathy is sometimes used to mean compassion.

  4. to express your sadness to someone because a relation or friend of theirs has recently died: I went along to the funeral in order to offer my sympathies. See more. Fewer examples. She said that she was deeply moved by all the letters of sympathy she had received. I have absolutely no sympathy for people who get into debt by overspending.

  5. Sympathy is a feeling of pity or sense of compassion — it's when you feel bad for someone else who's going through something hard. The ability to feel sympathy for others is a great part of what make us human, and it's what compels us to reach out and offer help.

  6. the feeling that you understand and care about someone's problems: I have no sympathy for people who say they can't find work but are really just too lazy to look. It's not money she wants, it's just a little sympathy. Fewer examples. Laura was composing a letter of sympathy.

  7. sympathy. noun. /ˈsɪmpəθi/ (pl. sympathies) [uncountable, countable, usually plural] the feeling of being sorry for someone; showing that you understand and care about someone's problems to express/feel sympathy for someone I have no sympathy for Jen; it's all her own fault. I wish he'd show me a little more sympathy.

  8. 3 days ago · sympathy, compassion, pity, empathy all denote the tendency, practice, or capacity to share in the feelings of others, especially their distress, sorrow, or unfulfilled desires.

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