How to Use lament in a Sentence

lament

1 of 2 verb
  • She lamented over the loss of her best friend.
  • Many lamented the high prices and the lack of healthy options.
    Andrea Whittle, Condé Nast Traveler, 19 July 2019
  • That’s where the ice loss that Dodd was lamenting comes in.
    Cheryl Katz, National Geographic, 2 Dec. 2019
  • On the track, the quartet lament how a lover only calls them on the weekends.
    Brittany Spanos, Rolling Stone, 24 Oct. 2023
  • Lovullo was left to lament the way the fourth inning played out.
    Nick Piecoro, The Arizona Republic, 12 Apr. 2022
  • Last week, Biden lamented the choice of the law’s name.
    Nathaniel Meyersohn, CNN, 14 Aug. 2023
  • One friend has lamented the loss of the recreation of the grand staircase at the start of the second act.
    Theodore P. Mahne, NOLA.com, 19 Mar. 2018
  • Riders no doubt lamented the end of an era — and the end of feeling the open breeze.
    Jacques Kelly, baltimoresun.com, 7 July 2018
  • The judge, for his part, lamented all the medical tests.
    Eli Hager, ProPublica, 16 Oct. 2023
  • One of the women lamented that her plans for a big fish fry that night were out the window.
    Kevin Rector, baltimoresun.com, 4 Oct. 2017
  • There’s no reason to lament their absence in the budget.
    Elise Amez-Droz, National Review, 6 Apr. 2022
  • For Eastwood, the slim prospects of the wannabe-hero can merit lament.
    John Semley, The New Republic, 23 Sep. 2021
  • Polemicists lament that cursive is going the way of the dodo.
    Jennifer Schuessler, New York Times, 12 July 2018
  • Still, Lattin laments that there has to be a battle in the first place.
    David Grimm, Science | AAAS, 8 Sep. 2017
  • Hurston laments: All these words from the seller, but not one word from the sold.
    Angela Helm, The Root, 10 May 2018
  • To seize the day, to lament, to mourn, to be nostalgic, to be proactive.
    Dan Snierson, EW.com, 12 Jan. 2022
  • Cannon went on to lament the erosion of his image of the couple.
    Jonah Valdez, Los Angeles Times, 29 Apr. 2023
  • Saban lamented the sluggish start to the game but praised the response.
    Michael Casagrande, AL.com, 22 Oct. 2017
  • Tribal members lament that stars are lost in the glare of flaring waste gas from wells.
    Matthew Brown, Anchorage Daily News, 24 June 2021
  • Walsh said, while also lamenting his own racist statements in the past.
    David Meyer, Fortune, 26 Aug. 2019
  • There goes that darned self-driving car again, a neighbor might lament.
    Lance Eliot, Forbes, 10 Oct. 2021
  • Most of us don’t think much about pants these days, except to lament having to put them on in the morning.
    Kiona N. Smith, Ars Technica, 4 Apr. 2022
  • In this case, the Sox lamented pivotal instances when the ball didn’t roll at all.
    Alex Speier, BostonGlobe.com, 22 July 2023
  • The Padres last year relied on the home run but lamented their abundance of homers with no one on base.
    Kevin Acee, sandiegouniontribune.com, 5 June 2018
  • Of course, there are financial reasons to lament this loss, as well.
    Kevin Sherrington, Dallas News, 8 July 2020
  • Families aren’t the only ones who lament when young men break from the world and enter the monastic life.
    Andrew Doran, National Review, 3 Mar. 2022
  • But this wasn’t a dinner group that sat around lamenting the status quo.
    Polina Marinova, Fortune, 9 May 2018
  • Those are parties are similar to the type of parties that Mack laments.
    al, 19 Dec. 2019
  • Woodard was quoted in the same article as lamenting a lack of justice.
    Washington Post, 29 May 2018
  • Reader lamented then past cuts to his staff and budget cuts to the sheriff's office.
    Sarah Brookbank, Cincinnati.com, 2 July 2019
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lament

2 of 2 noun
  • The poem is a lament for a lost love.
  • And in the present time this kind of lament is what prayer looks like.
    TIME, 20 Oct. 2023
  • Her casket was lowered to the strains of a lament from the queen’s bagpiper.
    Los Angeles Times, 19 Sep. 2022
  • That lament, that desire for change, is echoed again and again.
    Shwanika Narayan, San Francisco Chronicle, 1 June 2021
  • The demise of the Oakland tailgate scene was a common lament.
    Matt Kawahara, SFChronicle.com, 6 Oct. 2019
  • There was great in Nate Carter, and much more to love than lament.
    Dom Amore, Hartford Courant, 27 Aug. 2022
  • Some of you will suggest that is the typical old man’s lament.
    Dallas News, 6 June 2022
  • This is a lament over what has become — of big-league baseball.
    Star Tribune, 5 Feb. 2021
  • Wonder’s lament is the wrong song when the politics of hatred rule.
    Armond White, National Review, 25 Nov. 2020
  • The species' dismal status led Leopold to pen his lament for the future of cranes.
    Paul A. Smith, Journal Sentinel, 14 Oct. 2022
  • Like many great breakup songs, this one is both a lament and an indictment.
    Kelefa Sanneh, The New Yorker, 31 May 2021
  • Come on, the lament goes, show some compassion and common sense.
    Lance Eliot, Forbes, 8 Oct. 2021
  • This tribute to the living was also an elegy, a lament for the dead.
    CBS News, 16 Feb. 2020
  • As with many laments of cultural decline, the charge is most often levied by the old against the young.
    Charlie Tyson, The Atlantic, 20 July 2023
  • There is an undertone of lament to a lot of the violent action.
    Mark Olsen Staff Writer, Los Angeles Times, 7 May 2021
  • In France, though, many lament that the far right has been all but normalized.
    Washington Post, 24 Apr. 2022
  • Experts and members of Congress lament that far more needs to be done.
    David Lightman, SFChronicle.com, 29 Oct. 2019
  • Perhaps not, and that may be the lament that tugged at the heart of this powerful collection.
    Cathy Horyn, The Cut, 14 Sep. 2017
  • Her film is stubborn and pure; her soothing voice is a lament threaded with steel.
    Los Angeles Times, 24 July 2019
  • Few ordinary young Saudis lament—and many cheer—the woes of the old elites.
    Yaroslav Trofimov, WSJ, 23 Nov. 2017
  • The tabloids reported on it with a mix of smug derision and hollow lament.
    Josie Duffy Rice, The Atlantic, 12 July 2018
  • This was previously on the schedule for last year, and postponed, to the lament of many.
    Chris Willman, Variety, 16 Feb. 2022
  • The day is less a communal lament about death than a kind of celebration of life, and of lives past.
    Los Angeles Times, 31 Oct. 2020
  • Her mouth, open in a lament or siren song, has the red lips of one of de Kooning’s women.
    Roberta Smith, New York Times, 13 Apr. 2023
  • The trio shared similar laments, going back to a loss against Georgia on the road.
    Nubyjas Wilborn | , al, 8 Mar. 2023
  • Hawke, who is a second cousin of Williams, rode the elegiac rhythms of the play’s gorgeous lament.
    John Lahr, The New Yorker, 14 Sep. 2020
  • This sure reads like a lament over remaining in the Frozen Wasteland.
    Star Tribune, 5 Feb. 2021
  • It’s both ode and lament for Los Angeles, and works like a kind of map of the city in words.
    Los Angeles Times, 31 July 2021
  • Chris delivers the lyrics as a lament, processing grief as the track unfolds.
    Jason Lipshutz, Billboard, 17 Oct. 2022
  • His wife is on him to tone it down, plus free-throw groaning and rebound laments are pretty tame.
    Carolyn Hax, The Seattle Times, 24 July 2018

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'lament.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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