Word
Of
The
Day
bereft
bereft \bih-REFT\
adjective
To be bereft is to be deprived or robbed of something, or to lack something that you need, want, or expect.
Bereft is also used as a synonym of
bereaved.
// They appear to be completely
bereft of new ideas.
See the entry >
Examples:
"... this morning when I was going out to play in the gardens, I went to put on my favorite baseball cap since the sun was hot and, being
bereft of my own natural covering, I wished to avoid a sun-scorched scalp." — Dick Brooks,
The Daily Gazette (Schenectady, New York), 7 May 2026
Did you know?
In Old English, the verb
berēafian meant "to deprive of something." The modern equivalent (and descendant) of
berēafian is
bereave, a verb used to say that one has deprived or stripped someone of something, often suddenly and unexpectedly, and sometimes by force.
Bereft comes from the past participle of
bereave; Shakespeare uses the participle in
The Merchant of Venice, when Bassanio tells Portia, "Madam, you have bereft me of all words." But by Shakespeare's day
bereft was also being used as an adjective. The Bard uses it in
The Taming of the Shrew, as a newly obedient and docile Katharina declares, "A woman mov'd is like a fountain troubled—muddy, … thick, bereft of beauty."