Why this word is great
FORWEEP — [Verb] To exhaust (oneself) with weeping; weep excessively; (of a vine) to bleed excessively. From Middle English forwepen, combining the intensive prefix for- with weep ("to cry"). Unlike "bemoan" (which implies lamentation with vocal expression) or "exude" (of a vine, which describes natural sap secretion), forweep is the silent, somatic toll of grief—the swollen eyelids of a widow at dawn, the salt-stiffened handkerchief crumpled in a fist, or the slow, sticky drip of sap from a pruned grapevine. It is the point where sorrow becomes physiology, where even the earth weeps without sound, and the body, like the vine, bleeds because it can no longer hold anything in.