Word | scofflaw |
---|---|
Date | December 21, 2013 |
Type | noun |
Syllables | SKAHFF-law |
Etymology | In 1924, a wealthy Massachusetts Prohibitionist named Delcevare King sponsored a contest in which he asked participants to coin an appropriate word to mean "a lawless drinker." King sought a word that would cast violators of Prohibition laws in a light of shame. Two respondents came up independently with the winning word: "scofflaw," formed by combining the verb "scoff" and the noun "law." Henry Dale and Kate Butler, also of Massachusetts, split King's $200 prize. Improbably, despite some early scoffing from language critics, "scofflaw" managed to pick up steam in English and expand to a meaning that went beyond its Prohibition roots, referring to one who violates any law, not just laws related to drinking. |
Examples | The governor's office set up a database listing the names of scofflaws who hadn't paid their traffic fines. "For the reality of professional cycling in the [Lance] Armstrong years was that just about everyone was a scofflaws, that what Armstrong did was not an attempt to beat the system but rather a willingness to play by the system's demands." - From a film review by Kenneth Turan in the Los Angeles Times, November 8, 2013 |
Definition | : a contemptuous law violator |
Tags: wordoftheday::noun
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