How To Use Commiserate In A Sentence

  • I asked Mama and she said `Oh darling any time she's probably all broken hearted about Lori too have her come over and you can commiserate. RANDOM ACTS OF SENSELESS VIOLENCE
  • Schieffer concluded by wondering if, like Thomas Jefferson, Obama is finding the presidency to be a "splendid misery" and quoting Jefferson, who once said "the presidency had brought him nothing but increasing drudgery and a daily loss of friends," commiserated: "Have you lost any friends yet? MRC Latest Headlines
  • Her friends commiserated, of course, but could not comfort her.
  • Biden, who has had two craniotomies to remove aneurysms, said he commiserated with Giffords about the challenges of recovery. Rep. Giffords casts debt-limit vote on House floor
  • Following a breakup, a woman is likely to commiserate with her friends for a while and then get on with her life.
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  • We wish the committee well in future efforts to develop a Heritage Centre and commiserate with you on not receiving a grant from the Heritage Council on this.
  • I commiserate with my friend after he got fired due to his frequent slips in the business.
  • He has a brace too, and obviously sees me as a fellow sufferer of orthodontic torments with whom he can generally commiserate and complain to about not having had toffee in eighteen months.
  • The operator on the end of the phone will speak flawless English, be chatty and polite and might even commiserate with you over the rotten weather where you live.
  • I do hope you'll be better to-morrow," she said, and she commiserated with Anne on all she had missed -- the garden, the stars, the scent of flowers, the meteorites through whose summer shower the earth was now passing, the rising moon and its gibbosity. Crome Yellow
  • It seems his muse, once so pliable, has become perverse and wilful: I commiserate.
  • The commiserate—not 'commiserate'—the kick to our ... 08/29/2004 - 09/05/2004
  • He had tried to commiserate, assuring her she wasn't alone or useless or hateful or shallow or selfish. RIOT
  • Budget Committee Chair Kent Conrad (D-ND) and Ranking Republican Judd Gregg (R-NH) commiserated that they were almost alone among their colleagues in their concern for the long-run credit worthiness of the United States. Matthew Yglesias » The Strong Dollar
  • They pursed their lips, tut-tutted at appropriate times, murmured mournfully and commiserated gently. FINAL RESORT
  • While we often "commiserate" our victimhood with other people, it's a better idea to share how we authentically feel in a vulnerable way and to engage in an inquiry with people we trust about why this situation may be happening for us. Mike Robbins: Seeing Adversity As Happening for Us, Not to Us
  • So I called Chris - figured he could commiserate with me, since he got laid off from the same company about 6 months ago or so.
  • Luckily with condolences it wasn't necessary to go into detail -- all she need do was commiserate on the tragic accident. PROSPECT HILL
  • He had tried to commiserate, assuring her she wasn't alone or useless or hateful or shallow or selfish. RIOT
  • They commiserate also my accidents and chances: -- but MY word saith: Thus Spake Zarathustra A book for all and none
  • She knew of his death and was to commiserate with his family had she returned home on Sunday.
  • SM goes on to commiserate with Gunn over the pneumonia he had mentioned he was recovering from, gives him some doctorly admonishments to rest up and kvetches about his own ailments. Archive 2009-07-01
  • The programme was filmed in front of a live audience who had to clap, laugh and commiserate in all the appropriate places.
  • It seems his muse, once so pliable, has become perverse and wilful: I commiserate.
  • It was epitomized in the moment where Romney was campaigning last year and spoke to a Florida unemployed man and commiserated that he, too, was also unemployed. John Wellington Ennis: Why Mitt Romney Won't Get the Job
  • I asked Mama and she said `Oh darling any time she's probably all broken hearted about Lori too have her come over and you can commiserate. RANDOM ACTS OF SENSELESS VIOLENCE
  • I asked Mama and she said `Oh darling any time she's probably all broken hearted about Lori too have her come over and you can commiserate. RANDOM ACTS OF SENSELESS VIOLENCE
  • The young ones don't complain, nor do they want us to commiserate with them.
  • While we often "commiserate" our victimhood with other people, it's a better idea to share how we authentically feel (in a vulnerable way) and to engage in an inquiry with people we trust about why this situation may be happening for us. Mike Robbins: Seeing Adversity As Happening for Us, Not to Us
  • They commiserate also my accidents and chances: — but MY word saith: Thus spake Zarathustra; A book for all and none
  • They commiserate also my accidents and chances: - but my word saith: "Suffer the chance to come unto me: innocent is it as a little child! Thus Spake Zarathustra
  • I commiserate with my hon. Friend on his misfortune this evening, in finding himself inadvertently supporting us in the Lobby.
  • Or is Twitter the latest and, to put it ironically, greatest step in the stripping of meaning from news, information and social discourse? to "commiserate" with other pre-dawn DJs, and chat with listeners. Today in Oregon: The Oregonian
  • Miserable men commiserate not themselves, bowelless unto others, and merciless unto their own bowels. Christian Morals
  • Neighbours commiserated her descent and her miserable sentence, but she saw it otherwise.
  • Biden, who has had two craniotomies to remove aneurysms, said he commiserated with Giffords about the challenges of recovery. Rep. Giffords casts debt-limit vote on House floor
  • They commiserate and validate each others' feelings and become confidantes.
  • I would also like to commiserate with the unsuccessful candidates.
  • They're there for me - they comfort, cajole, coerce, cohort, conspire, and commiserate.
  • They commiserated the misfortune of their teacher.
  • She was to go up to the house when she came home to commiserate with them.
  • I asked Mama and she said `Oh darling any time she's probably all broken hearted about Lori too have her come over and you can commiserate. RANDOM ACTS OF SENSELESS VIOLENCE
  • I commiserate with you on being a bit cracky for some people's tastes.
  • I pitied the hapless patient and commiserated with the unhappy house officer, unsettled by the echoes of my own mistakes.
  • After her novel was turned down by publishers and dropped by her agent, she created the site to commiserate with other aspiring authors.
  • ‘I commiserate with all the victims and those who lost their loved ones,’ she said during a radio broadcast.
  • We will have 24 hours to think about the game, to have a few drinks and commiserate with each other, and then tomorrow we will get back to work.
  • He was the ‘unhappiest man in the land ‘, a singer you didn't so much listen to as commiserate with.
  • He had tried to commiserate, assuring her she wasn't alone or useless or hateful or shallow or selfish. RIOT
  • He had tried to commiserate, assuring her she wasn't alone or useless or hateful or shallow or selfish. RIOT
  • Doug Robertson and I commiserated about it once, only he took the idea and Dirty Snowflake Apparel was born. Hooping.org | Blog | Hooping Clothes For Guys: Dirty Snowflake
  • Luckily with condolences it wasn't necessary to go into detail -- all she need do was commiserate on the tragic accident. PROSPECT HILL
  • I commiserated Patrick Swayze's death back in September (How I'll Always Remember Patrick Swayze) and saw pictures of his final year or two and was awestruck at how his physique had deteriorated. How I'll Always Remember Dennis Hopper
  • It seems his muse, once so pliable, has become perverse and wilful: I commiserate.
  • She must certainly come to commiserate with the poor woman on having had such ill fortune for so long.
  • They congratulate you on the streets after a victory and commiserate with you, or ask you what happened when you lose.
  • Some one went to commiserate with Harbury and Harbury went to lacerate Riley for announcing an appointment he had no intention of accepting.
  • They commiserated with representatives of big business, like American Airlines. Entrepreneurs smell opportunity
  • I commiserated with her on the loss of her job.
  • Luckily with condolences it wasn't necessary to go into detail -- all she need do was commiserate on the tragic accident. PROSPECT HILL
  • We commiserate with his wife and family, brothers, and sister Mary Kate, also with nephews and nieces, relatives and circle of friends who came to say goodbye.
  • The commiserate—not 'commiserate'—the kick to our economy Archive 2004-09-05
  • Cllr Dalton was congratulated by his fellow members on the council who were also quick to commiserate with Cllr Scully for the manner in which he lost out.
  • Indeed, in the midst of the ongoing crisis in his state, Walker actually called Governor Kaisch of Ohio, who's contemplating similar proposals, to "commiserate" about what he's going through. The stakes in Wisconsin
  • Luckily with condolences it wasn't necessary to go into detail -- all she need do was commiserate on the tragic accident. PROSPECT HILL
  • Luckily with condolences it wasn't necessary to go into detail -- all she need do was commiserate on the tragic accident. PROSPECT HILL
  • People in that situation can commiserate with other parents about the difficulties, and then fall back on agreeing that ‘in the end it's all worthwhile’.
  • Miserable men commiserate not themselves, bowelless unto themselves, and merciless unto their own bowels. Letter to a Friend
  • We commiserate with fellow supporters when their heroes and their particular sporting interest goes down.

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