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Ignominious Word Shame Root Lose January Adjective Ig Nuh Min Ee Us

Ignominious describes something marked by disgrace or shame, or deserving of contempt. It originates from Latin words related to 'name' and 'not', signifying dishonor.

Ignominious (adjective) describes something marked by disgrace or shame, or deserving of shame. It stems from Latin roots related to name and negativity, indicating dishonor or humiliation.

Word ignominious
Date January 10, 2016
Type adjective
Syllables ig-nuh-MIN-ee-us
Etymology The -nom- of ignominious comes from nomen, the Latin word for "name" or "repute." (Nomen is also the root of misnomer, nomenclature, and nominal, among others.) The ig- part of the word is akin to the negative prefix in-; when joined to the root -nom-, it indicates the namelessness that goes with shame or dishonor. To suffer an ignominious fate is to lose the opportunity to make a name for oneself or to lose one's good name. When ignominious was first borrowed from a French form of the word in the 15th century, it meant "disgraced" or "dishonorable." The word continues to have such meanings, but it also has the somewhat milder meanings of "embarrassing" and "humiliating."
Examples "[People's] first issue appeared in March of 1974—two years after the ignominious shuttering of the weekly Life—and it was an immediate sensation, drawing more than 900,000 readers from the outset." — Jim Windolf, Vanity Fair, 16 Oct. 2013

"It made no difference that the doctor had said the cornea would heal. I didn't believe him. How ignominious to be blinded by a squash racquet." — Rosemary Mahoney, For the Benefit of Those Who See, 2014
Definition 1 : marked with or characterized by disgrace or shame : dishonorable
2 : deserving of shame or infamy : despicable
3 : humiliating, degrading

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

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