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plaint (n.)

c. 1200, pleinte, "lamentation, mourning, audible expression of sorrow," from Old French plainte "lament, lamentation" (12c.), from Latin planctus "lamentation, wailing, beating of the breast," from past-participle stem of plangere "to lament; to strike (the breast, in grief or mourning)," from PIE root *plak- (2) "to strike." The connecting notion in Latin probably is beating one's breast in grief. Meaning "complaint, murmuring, grumbling" is from late 14c. Sense of "lawsuit, legal complaint, statement of grievances made to a court for the purpose of asking redress" is from late 14c.

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Definitions of plaint from WordNet

plaint (n.)
(United Kingdom) a written statement of the grounds of complaint made to court of law asking for the grievance to be redressed;
plaint (n.)
a cry of sorrow and grief;
Synonyms: lament / lamentation / wail
From wordnet.princeton.edu