[
US
/ɹɪˈpɛnt/
]
VERB
- turn away from sin or do penitence
- feel remorse for; feel sorry for; be contrite about
How To Use repent In A Sentence
- Emerald's feelings must have shown on her face, for all at once Jeremy was repentant. YELLOW BIRD
- I would like weeping with the smile rather than repenting with the cry,when my heart is broken ,is it needed to fix?
- But government does not have the freedom to make proposals in haste and repent at leisure. Times, Sunday Times
- Occidentali Noruagiæ Insula, quæ Glacialis dicitur, magno circumfusa Oceano repentur, obsoletæ admodum habitationis tellus, A briefe commentarie of Island, by Arngrimus Ionas
- I was addressing the issue of whether his deathbed activities that I read about could meaningfully be described as signs of repentance for his proabortion rights stance. Sen. Ted Kennedy's right to a Catholic funeral
- Only when I had repented, that is to say, when I had ceased to look upon myself as a regular man, and had begun to regard myself as a man exactly like every one else, -- only then did my path become clear before me. What to Do?
- Despite the challenging nature of his work to date, Aronofsky is unrepentant about his plans to enter the mainstream with his next film.
- Plum flightless refrigerating gay honolulu hotel discount erik upsetter, gay vesper apparent pics pewit gag sassing, gay bogmat meticulous blackening motto assassinated stanislavsky aboveboard dog delayer ass repentantly. Rational Review
- But since he or his representative maintained for years that his proabortion rights stance is consistent with being a Catholic in good standing, with receiving Holy Communion, leading family prayers, and being visited by priest friends, I can't for the life of me figure out why I should see his doing such things on his deathbed as "signs of repentance" for the manifest grave sin of his proabortion rights stance. Sen. Ted Kennedy's right to a Catholic funeral
- But the next minute, the little creature whimpering, she bent down in impatient repentance and kissed it, whimpering too. That Lass o' Lowrie's: A Lancashire Story