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Odious English Adjective Middle Latin Noun Meaning Odium

Odious means something that arouses or deserves hatred or repugnance; it is hateful.

Odious means something that arouses or deserves hatred or repugnance; it is hateful.

Word odious
Date October 9, 2016
Type adjective
Syllables OH-dee-us
Etymology Odious has been with us since the days of Middle English. We borrowed it from Anglo-French, which in turn had taken it from Latin odiosus. The Latin adjective came from the noun odium, meaning "hatred." Odium is also an ancestor of the English verb annoy (another word that came to Middle English via Anglo-French). And, at the beginning of the 17th century, odium entered English in its unaltered form, giving us a noun meaning "hatred" or "disgrace" (as in "ideas that have incurred much odium").
Examples Volunteers gathered on Saturday morning to scrub away the odious graffiti spray-painted on the school.

"I can't help being reminded of the progress we've made as a nation, as well as the odious past of slavery, the many men and women who have lost their lives in wars…." — Candi Castleberry Singleton, quoted in The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, 5 Sept. 2016
Definition : arousing or deserving hatred or repugnance : hateful

Tags: wordoftheday::adjective

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