0 past simple and past participle of regret
Parents did not tend to regret their divorces, although they may have regretted that they had not handled the process better.
There is considerable anecdotal evidence of bereaved parents who have profoundly regretted agreeing to their child having surgery.
It was again regretted that the station had to be closed at the beginning of 1967.
This is all the more needed because women who regretted the sterilization decision did so because of subsequent child loss or perceived side-effects.
It is to be regretted that the separate work-list doesn't contain any further details beyond the year of composition.
Not quite the way the seed scientist writes his papers: and perhaps in some ways that may be regretted.
While some regretted a lack of family support, others felt liberated from the demands and responsibilities of family relations.
Nor is this to be regretted, for there is a risk involved in the relegation of cultural claims to the fringes of normal politics.