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malign
Episode 4012

malign

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day · Merriam-Webster

October 18, 20171m 38s

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Show Notes

Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for October 18, 2017 is:


malign \muh-LYNE\ verb

: to utter injuriously misleading or false reports about : speak evil of


Examples:

The tech guru recalls how as a high schooler he was often maligned or simply ignored by the popular kids in his school.

"I am a contrarian on the Apple Watch, which I believe has been unfairly maligned by tech pundits. I love mine, and I get pretty frustrated by a lot of Apple products." — Nick Wingfield, The New York Times, 14 Sept. 2017


Did you know?

When a word's got mal- in it, it's no good. That prefix traces to the Latin word malus (which means "bad"), and it puts the negative vibes in both the verb and adjective forms of malign (from the Latin malignus, meaning "evil in nature") and a host of other English words. You can see it in malpractice (bad medical practice) and malady (a bad condition, such as a disease or illness, of the body or mind). A malefactor is someone guilty of bad deeds, and malice is a desire to cause injury, pain, or distress to another person. Other mal- formed words include malaise, malcontent, maladroit, malodorous, and malnourished.

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Topics

WEBSTERDICTIONARYENGLISHLANGUAGEMERRIAMVOCABULARYWORD A DAYWORDWORD OF THE DAYMERRIAM-WEBSTERWORDS