scandaling









scandaling


noun

  1. a disgraceful or discreditable action, circumstance, etc.
  2. an offense caused by a fault or misdeed.
  3. damage to reputation; public disgrace.
  4. defamatory talk; malicious gossip.
  5. a person whose conduct brings disgrace or offense.

verb (used with object), scan·daled, scan·dal·ing or (especially British) scan·dalled, scan·dal·ling.

  1. British Dialect. to defame (someone) by spreading scandal.
  2. Obsolete. to disgrace.

noun

  1. a disgraceful action or eventhis negligence was a scandal
  2. censure or outrage arising from an action or event
  3. a person whose conduct causes reproach or disgrace
  4. malicious talk, esp gossip about the private lives of other people
  5. law a libellous action or statement

verb (tr) obsolete

  1. to disgrace
  2. to scandalize

n.1580s, “discredit caused by irreligious conduct,” from Middle French scandale (12c.), from Late Latin scandalum “cause for offense, stumbling block, temptation,” from Greek skandalon “a trap or snare laid for an enemy,” in New Testament, metaphorically as “a stumbling block, offense;” originally “trap with a springing device,” from PIE *skand- “to leap, climb” (see scan (v.); cf. also slander (n.), which is another form of the same word). Attested from early 13c., but the modern word likely is a reborrowing. Meaning “malicious gossip,” also “shameful action or event” is from 1590s; sense of “person whose conduct is a disgrace” is from 1630s. Scandal sheet “sensational newspaper” is from 1939. Scandal-monger is from 1702.

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