Why this word is great
BEWEEP — [Verb] To weep over or lament something; to express grief through tears. From Middle English bewepen, from Old English bewēpan ("to weep over, mourn"), from the prefix be- ("about, over") + wēpan ("to weep"). Unlike "bemoan," which emphasizes vocal and often tearless lament, or "deplore," which channels sorrow into stern condemnation, to beweep is to physically saturate grief, to let sorrow pool visibly upon the thing mourned. It is the hot salt track eroding a cheek, the damp woolen scent of a handkerchief clutched until limp, the slow warp of a love letter left in the rain—the body’s slow, patient audit of a loss the mind has yet to fully reckon.