Better words for

cry

Cry” does the job — but the right alternative does more. Here are 6 curated replacements, each with a definition, pronunciation, and an example of it working on the page.

weep

/wiːp/Elevated

To shed tears as an expression of grief, sorrow, or overwhelming emotion.

She wept quietly by the window long after the last guest had gone home.

Best for: Slightly more dignified than 'cry'; works well in emotional prose or formal writing.

sob

/sɒb/Punchy

To cry with convulsive, audible gasps that shake the whole body.

He sobbed into his pillow until exhaustion finally pulled him under.

Best for: More visceral and physical than 'cry'; punchy and immediate in dramatic scenes.

keen

/kiːn/Literary

To wail loudly and mournfully, especially as a ritual lament for the dead.

The old women keened over the body, their voices rising and falling like wind.

Best for: Rooted in Irish/Scottish funeral tradition; powerful in historical or cultural narratives.

ululate

/ˈʌl-jʊ-leɪt/Rare Gem

To howl or wail loudly with a wavering, high-pitched sound of grief or passion.

She ululated from the rooftop, her grief too vast for ordinary tears.

Best for: Evokes raw, cultural, or primal mourning; striking in literary or poetic contexts.

lament

/lə-ˈmɛnt/Elevated

To cry out or mourn with passionate expressions of sorrow and loss.

He lamented through the empty halls as dawn crept over the cold stone floor.

Best for: Carries poetic and formal weight; ideal for elegies, speeches, or literary fiction.

greet

/ɡriːt/Rare Gem

An archaic and dialectal Scottish word meaning to weep or cry bitterly.

The child greeted in the corner, red-faced and inconsolable until sunrise.

Best for: Archaic Scottish dialect; deeply rare and atmospheric in historical or regional fiction.

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