Rue the day?

Zootonius

Blinking Osprey
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I'm writing a story about an older woman and her young lover. She is reflecting on that day in the future which she know will come, where they part ways. I like "Rue the day," but refers to the past. Perhaps word mavens can suggest a phase about angst over a future event.
 
I'm writing a story about an older woman and her young lover. She is reflecting on that day in the future which she know will come, where they part ways. I like "Rue the day," but refers to the past. Perhaps word mavens can suggest a phase about angst over a future event.

I don't see any problem with "rue the day" used in reference to the future.family-guy-rue-the-day.gif
 
I'm starting to rue posting this question!

Edit: or am I ruing future posts?
 
Rue the day works for me. I don't see why she can't have angst for a future date.
Agree this. When you think about it, it makes just as much sense for the rue to be in the future, as it does in the past. Worse in a way, because it implies you can't do anything about it, there's an unavoidable inevitability.
 
She anticipates the day ruefully.

Or rues anticipating the day.
 
I'm writing a story about an older woman and her young lover. She is reflecting on that day in the future which she know will come, where they part ways. I like "Rue the day," but refers to the past. Perhaps word mavens can suggest a phase about angst over a future event.
My dictionary (New Oxford American) gives this example sentence:

"She might live to rue the day for this impetuous decision."

So you can't rue an event in the future. You have to predict that in the future it will be rued when looked back on. Also, 'rue' implies regret, which she may not feel. Better to have loved and lost, and all that.

How about 'wistful' or 'wistfully'? "She wistfully foresaw the day when they would part ways."
 
I'm writing a story about an older woman and her young lover. She is reflecting on that day in the future which she know will come, where they part ways. I like "Rue the day," but refers to the past. Perhaps word mavens can suggest a phase about angst over a future event.
That's how I've always heard 'Rue the day' used; You will rue the day... If you do that, you'll be sorry.
Perfect usage.
 
For a future date, I'd probably use "dread the day," rather than "rue the day,"
 
I'm writing a story about an older woman and her young lover. She is reflecting on that day in the future which she know will come, where they part ways. I like "Rue the day," but refers to the past. Perhaps word mavens can suggest a phase about angst over a future event.
You can rue today the fact that the event is coming, even though it hasn't happened yet.

She (presently) rues that they will (later) have to part.
 
I keep getting distracted by the fact that "Rue" is an uncommon female-gendered name. (It's an herb, like rapunzel.) Rue McClanahan is the only famous one I can think of.

-Billie
 
Yeah, the answer is always obvious after someone points it out. ;)

Dread's the right word.

If I read "rue" in that context, it would bother me. It might be grammatically correct, but I think anyone who would actually use the term in a sentence would not use it as you're suggesting in the first post. It's hard for me to explain why, but it just doesn't ring true to me.
 
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