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Sympathise   Listen
Sympathise

verb
1.
Share the feelings of; understand the sentiments of.  Synonym: sympathize.
2.
To feel or express sympathy or compassion.  Synonyms: commiserate, sympathize.
3.
Be understanding of.  Synonyms: empathise, empathize, sympathize, understand.



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"Sympathise" Quotes from Famous Books



... "They, of course, sympathise with him, poor old gentleman, because he's blind. His is, indeed, a terrible affliction. Only fancy the change from a brilliant Parliamentary career ...
— The House of Whispers • William Le Queux

... did he open his lips to do so, than a picture of Zoie in all her child-like pleading loveliness, arose to dissuade him. He could imagine his dinner companions all pretending to sympathise with him, while they flayed poor Zoie alive. She would never have another chance to be known as a respectable woman, and compared to most women of his acquaintance, she WAS a respectable woman. True, according to old-fashioned standards, she had been indiscreet, but apparently the ...
— Baby Mine • Margaret Mayo

... found in the works of many modern travellers; nor any thing in general more ridiculous than the ravings of admiration with which this catalogue is described, and with which the reader in general is little disposed to sympathise. Without attempting, therefore, to enumerate the great works which were there to be met with, we shall confine ourselves to a simpler object, to the delineation of the general character by which the different schools of painting are distinguished, ...
— Travels in France during the years 1814-1815 • Archibald Alison

... any one to whom I could impart the intelligence—there was no one whom I could expect to sympathise with me, or to whom I could pour out the abundance of my joy; for that the service prohibited. What could I do? Why, I could dance; so I sprang from my chair, and singing the tune, commenced a quadrille movement,—Tal ...
— Newton Forster • Frederick Marryat

... the kindest letters my mother received after her great loss was one from Sir David Wilkie. It was dated 18th April 1840. "I hasten," he said, "to assure you of my most sincere condolence on your severe affliction, feeling that I can sympathise in the privation you suffer from losing one who was my earliest professional friend, whose art I at all times admired, and whose society and conversation was perhaps the most agreeable that I ever met with. " He was the founder of the Landscape Painting School of Scotland, ...
— James Nasmyth's Autobiography • James Nasmyth


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