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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
remorse
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
be filled with horror/fear/anger/doubt/remorse
▪ Their faces were suddenly filled with fear.
pang of jealousy/guilt/remorse/regret
▪ She felt a sudden pang of guilt.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
full
▪ Something had died in me and I felt terrible and guilty and full of remorse.
▪ Sumers, ashamed and full of remorse, attempts to locate his daughter.
▪ She stopped, her heart full of remorse and sadness and a great, overwhelming love.
▪ Afterwards she would be full of remorse and would return to playing the clean-living model student.
▪ Whenever he's freed, his solicitor added that Paul Rachael remains full of remorse for what happened.
■ VERB
express
▪ Next time you communicate with your friend, express deep remorse and offer a groveling apology.
▪ Anyway, I accepted responsibility and apologized and expressed deep remorse.
▪ And, to this day, he has expressed no remorse whatsoever for his behavior or even admitted to the crime.
feel
▪ Melissa felt a pang of remorse.
▪ Only then, after it was too late to reverse the process, did I feel remorse.
▪ She felt a moment's remorse as she looked down at his sleeping face.
▪ To this day, I still feel no remorse for these men.
▪ Have you ever felt remorse after drinking? 12.
▪ Indeed I was forgetful, pathologically so, and for this too I felt nothing but remorse.
▪ Mr. Griffiths Does not the Secretary of State feel any remorse about those figures?
▪ As I loped along, I felt absolutely no remorse.
fill
▪ True, at the start he had been filled with remorse.
▪ Out to get what he can, but filled with remorse.
show
▪ A frequent comment of observers about a prisoner in for a serious offence like murder is that he shows no remorse.
▪ Mass killer William George Bonin, showing no remorse and described by Gov.
▪ Samson routinely got into fights, and once killed 1000 Philistines single-handedly and then gloated over it, showing no remorse.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ He admitted killing the man but showed no sign of remorse.
▪ Many men are afflicted with guilt and remorse at leaving their wives.
▪ She was full of remorse for hurting her family.
▪ The woman sounded so nice, McKee felt a twinge of remorse at what he had done to her family.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As I loped along, I felt absolutely no remorse.
▪ I like a bit of a giggle, not remorse and tears afterwards.
▪ Immediately overcome by remorse, I lowered him to the floor and tried to apologize.
▪ Jean, distraught with grief and remorse, was put on trial.
▪ Sumers, ashamed and full of remorse, attempts to locate his daughter.
▪ The shame, the guilt, the remorse were weighing heavily upon the parents.
▪ To this day, I still feel no remorse for these men.
▪ When Robbie lost her temper, it was a sudden eruption, short-lived and always followed by remorse.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Remorse

Remorse \Re*morse"\ (r?*m?rs"), n. [OE. remors, OF. remors,F. remords, LL. remorsus, fr. L. remordere, remorsum, to bite again or back, to torment; pref. re- re- + mordere to bite. See Morsel.]

  1. The anguish, like gnawing pain, excited by a sense of guilt; compunction of conscience for a crime committed, or for the sins of one's past life. ``Nero will be tainted with remorse.''
    --Shak.

  2. Sympathetic sorrow; pity; compassion.

    Curse on the unpardoning prince, whom tears can draw To no remorse.
    --Dryden.

    But evermore it seem'd an easier thing At once without remorse to strike her dead.
    --Tennyson.

    Syn: Compunction; regret; anguish; grief; compassion. See Compunction.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
remorse

late 14c., from Old French remors (Modern French remords), from Medieval Latin remorsum, noun use of neuter past participle of Latin remordere "to vex, disturb," literally "to bite back," from re- "back" (see re-) + mordere "to bite" (see mordant).\n

\nThe sense evolution was via the Medieval Latin phrase remorsus conscientiæ (translated into Middle English as ayenbite of inwit). Middle English also had a verb, remord "to strike with remorse, touch with compassion, prick one's conscience."

Wiktionary
remorse

n. A feeling of regret or sadness for doing wrong or sinning.

WordNet
remorse

n. a feeling of deep regret (usually for some misdeed) [syn: compunction, self-reproach]

Wikipedia
Remorse (House)

"Remorse" is the 12th episode of the sixth season of House. It aired on January 25, 2010.

Remorse

Remorse is an emotional expression of personal regret felt by a person after they have committed an act which they deem to be shameful, hurtful, or violent. Remorse is closely allied to guilt and self-directed resentment. When a person regrets an earlier action or failure to act, it may be because of remorse or in response to various other consequences, including being punished for the act or omission. In a legal context, the perceived remorse of an offender is assessed by Western justice systems during trials, sentencing, parole hearings, and in restorative justice. However, it has been pointed out that epistemological problems arise in assessing an offender's level of remorse.

A person who is incapable of feeling remorse is often labelled with antisocial personality disorder - as characterized in the DSM IV-TR. In general, a person needs to be unable to feel fear, as well as remorse, in order to develop psychopathic traits. Legal and business professions such as insurance have done research on the expression of remorse via apologies, primarily because of the potential litigation and financial implications.

Usage examples of "remorse".

It is a very ancient reproach, suggested by the ignorance or the malice of infidelity, that the Christians allured into their party the most atrocious criminals, who, as soon as they were touched by a sense of remorse, were easily persuaded to wash away, in the water of baptism, the guilt of their past conduct, for which the temples of the gods refused to grant them any expiation.

But she was wrong: despite the disappointment that each of them felt, despite his regret for his clumsiness and her remorse for the madness of the anisette, they were not apart for a moment in the days that followed.

The affrighted countenances of some betrayed their inward remorse, while others advanced with confidence and alacrity to the altars of the gods.

The blurb mocks itself: Van knows its buoyant blitheness reflects only his own first raptures at Ardis, not his later discovery that life always mixes radiance and remorse.

Tuckwell, I felt remorse scatter in instrumental brilliance, bravura trills, shakes, flourishes, demisemiquavers.

Falkner answered, but the remorse that burthened his heart gave something of bitterness to his reply.

Allegro breaks out in the major key, an Allegro full of passion and delirium, deaf to the warnings of Heaven, regardless of remorse, enraptured of pleasure, madly inconstant and daring, rapid and impetuous as a torrent, flashing and swift as a sword, overleaping all obstacles, scaling balconies, and bewildering the alguazils.

I am no better in my own eyes than a perjurer, unworthy of Mademoiselle de Vesian, to whom I brought a heart devoured by remorse and by a passion that nothing could extinguish.

To the keen watcher it appeared as if that sense of living power, of unconquered will and defiant mind was no longer there, and as if he himself need no longer fear that almost supersensual thrill which had a while ago kindled in him a vague sense of admiration--almost of remorse.

Gut-wrenching regret and remorse moved through Ryder as he gazed down into that teary face.

In writing of these things in his diary, Blake expresses a curious kind of remorse, and talks of the duty of burying the Shining Trapezohedron and of banishing what he had evoked by letting daylight into the hideous jutting spire.

The passion of revenge, which had in part stimulated her to the commission of this atrocious deed, died, even at the moment when it was gratified, and left her to the horrors of unavailing pity and remorse, which would probably have empoisoned all the years she had promised herself with the Marquis de Villeroi, had her expectations of an alliance with him been realized.

I should scarce suppose even a demon would act so, were there not many with hearts more depraved even than those of fiends, who first have torn some unsophisticated soul from the pinnacle of excellence, on which it sat smiling, and then triumphed in their hellish victory when it writhed in agonized remorse, and strove to hide its unavailing regret in the dust from which the fabric of her virtues had arisen.

His mind was barraged by dozens of messages unsent to loved ones, and an untold number of emotions ranging from panic and terror to remorse and relief assaulted his psyche.

In order fully to comprehend his unwearied persecution of Glendower, it must constantly be remembered that to this persecution he was bound by a necessity which, urgent, dark, and implicating life itself, rendered him callous to every obstacle and unsusceptible of all remorse.