pitiful

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
pitiful
    adj 1: inspiring mixed contempt and pity; "their efforts were
           pathetic"; "pitiable lack of character"; "pitiful
           exhibition of cowardice" [syn: {pathetic}, {pitiable},
           {pitiful}]
    2: bad; unfortunate; "my finances were in a deplorable state";
       "a lamentable decision"; "her clothes were in sad shape"; "a
       sorry state of affairs" [syn: {deplorable}, {distressing},
       {lamentable}, {pitiful}, {sad}, {sorry}]
    3: deserving or inciting pity; "a hapless victim"; "miserable
       victims of war"; "the shabby room struck her as
       extraordinarily pathetic"- Galsworthy; "piteous appeals for
       help"; "pitiable homeless children"; "a pitiful fate"; "Oh,
       you poor thing"; "his poor distorted limbs"; "a wretched
       life" [syn: {hapless}, {miserable}, {misfortunate},
       {pathetic}, {piteous}, {pitiable}, {pitiful}, {poor},
       {wretched}]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Pitiful \Pit"i*ful\, a.
   1. Full of pity; tender-hearted; compassionate; kind;
      merciful; sympathetic.
      [1913 Webster]

            The Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy.
                                                  --James v. 11.
      [1913 Webster]

   2. Piteous; lamentable; eliciting compassion.
      [1913 Webster]

            A thing, indeed, very pitiful and horrible.
                                                  --Spenser.
      [1913 Webster]

   3. To be pitied for littleness or meanness; miserable;
      paltry; contemptible; despicable.
      [1913 Webster]

            That's villainous, and shows a most pitiful ambition
            in the fool that uses it.             --Shak.
      [1913 Webster]

   Syn: Despicable; mean; paltry. See {Contemptible}.
        [1913 Webster] -- {Pit"i*ful*ly}, adv. --
        {Pit"i*ful*ness}, n.
        [1913 Webster]
    
from The Devil's Dictionary (1881-1906)
PITIFUL, adj.  The state of an enemy of opponent after an imaginary
encounter with oneself.
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
118 Moby Thesaurus words for "pitiful":
      abominable, affecting, arrant, atrocious, awful, base, beastly,
      beggarly, beneath contempt, beneath one, blameworthy, brutal,
      cheap, cheesy, common, contemptible, crummy, debasing, degrading,
      demeaning, deplorable, despicable, detestable, dire, disgraceful,
      disgusting, doleful, dreadful, egregious, enormous, fetid, filthy,
      flagrant, foul, fulsome, gaudy, gimcracky, grievous, gross, gutter,
      hateful, heartrending, heinous, horrible, horrid, humiliating,
      humiliative, infamous, infra dig, infra indignitatem,
      insignificant, lamentable, little, loathsome, lousy, mean,
      meretricious, miserable, monstrous, moving, nasty, nefarious,
      noisome, notorious, obnoxious, odious, offensive, opprobrious,
      outrageous, paltry, pathetic, piteous, pitiable, poor, rank,
      regrettable, reprehensible, repulsive, rotten, rubbishy, rueful,
      sad, scandalous, schlock, scrubby, scruffy, scummy, scurvy, scuzzy,
      shabby, shameful, shocking, shoddy, small, sordid, sorry, squalid,
      terrible, too bad, touching, trashy, trifling, trumpery,
      two-for-a-cent, two-for-a-penny, twopenny, twopenny-halfpenny,
      unbecoming, unclean, unimportant, unworthy of one, valueless, vile,
      villainous, woeful, worst, worthless, wretched

    

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