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obloquy
[ ob-luh-kwee ]
noun
- censure, blame, or abusive language aimed at a person or thing, especially by numerous persons or by the general public.
Synonyms: revilement, aspersion, calumny, reproach
Antonyms: praise
- discredit, disgrace, or bad repute resulting from public blame, abuse, or denunciation.
Antonyms: credit
obloquy
/ ˈɒbləkwɪ /
noun
- defamatory or censorious statements, esp when directed against one person
- disgrace brought about by public abuse
Other Words From
- ob·lo·qui·al [o-, bloh, -kwee-, uh, l], adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of obloquy1
Example Sentences
The statements made by the D.A.’s office, the complaint alleges, made Thomas “the object of obloquy and ridicule.”
That’s a shame, because the airline’s 11 outside directors are arguably the guiltiest of the guilty parties in the company’s recent fiasco, the most deserving of obloquy.
Yes, the presidency was a thankless job, “a most unpleasant seat, full of thorns, briars, thistles, murmuring, fault-finding, calumny, obloquy.”
Moreover, their statements came after they had sustained public obloquy for their silence.
Whatever their motivations, none of them deserves credit for abandoning Trump now, when he’s facing a tsunami of obloquy and the constitutional end of his term at noon on Jan. 20.
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