Grieving in a sentence as an adjective

Coupled with a famous couple as the distraight and grieving parents.

Preying on grieving people with your religious beliefs is worse.

But the crowd isn't grieving, they're simply morbidly curious.

For most, it was their first time facing a grieving widow with a young child hugging her leg. Those stories, coupled with the blame, changed the landscape of command.

It is an ongoing crisis, part of a larger natural disaster, with many people still actively grieving.

This was incredibly sad, but one of the most deeply relatable stories I've read for anyone who has lost a loved one or struggled with grieving.

Concern about "false hope" is bizarre to me - it's not like this is a long-term disease like cancer, where false hope can damage a graceful death and grieving process.

While I'm wary of anything I read on the internet, if FT is being completely truthful you can't help but think that things are a bit odd. From the beginning I felt like it was probably just grieving parents gripping at straws, but the strangeness just kept piling up...

You don't tell a grieving mother who just lost their child that it gets better, that they can just have a new one and really it's not as bad as it could have been, some poor mother just lost all three of her kids!

It's really not a relevant metric for wether ****** is ****** if there are grieving friends and family, or if people live in fear - it seems every other crime show deals with the ****** of a miserable, lonely homeless guy or a prostitute.

If I had rolled along with the strip's popularity and repeated myself for another five, ten, or twenty years, the people now "grieving" for Calvin and Hobbes would be wishing me dead and cursing newspapers for running tedious, ancient strips like mine instead of acquiring fresher, livelier talent.

Grieving definitions

adjective

sorrowful through loss or deprivation; "bereft of hope"

See also: bereaved bereft grief-stricken