I feel great sympathy for the McCanns and especially Madeleine McCann. I empathise with the parents as I can imagine how they must have felt and continue to feel with regard to their child's disappearance and the feelings of guilt and regret they must have to live with. Sadly I believe once Madeleine was taken she was killed shortly thereafter so my feelings with regard to her are total sympathy rather than empathy as I cannot imagine (or perhaps don't want to) the feelings that she experienced in her last moments.
When I looked at the definitions I found I was wondering if it was possible to feel empathy or sympathy for a person who was thought to be deceased?
G-unit said "I feel great sympathy for the McCanns and especially Madeleine McCann." But if she is deceased is it sympathy or empathy she feels, or is it just sorrow?
I'm sure we can feel sorrow for someone who's died.
sorrow
/ˈsɒrəʊ/
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noun
a feeling of deep distress caused by loss, disappointment, or other misfortune suffered by oneself or others.
"a bereaved person needs time to work through their sorrow"
Similar:
sadness
unhappiness
dejection
regret
depression
misery
cheerlessness
downheartedness
despondency
despair
desolation
wretchedness
glumness
gloom
gloominess
heaviness of heart
dolefulness
melancholy
low spirits
mournfulness
woe
broken-heartedness
heartache
grief
down
dolorous
disconsolateness
disconsolation
dismalness
Opposite:
joy
verb
feel or display deep distress.
"a woman had cried all night, sorrowing over the death of her husband"