mortification
Americannoun
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a feeling of humiliation or shame, as through some injury to one's pride or self-respect.
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a cause or source of such humiliation or shame.
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the practice of asceticism by penitential discipline to overcome desire for sin and to strengthen the will.
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Pathology. the death of one part of the body while the rest is alive; gangrene; necrosis.
noun
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a feeling of loss of prestige or self-respect; humiliation
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something causing this
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Christianity the practice of mortifying the senses
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another word for gangrene
Usage
What does mortification mean? Mortification is a feeling of humiliation or extreme embarrassment.You know when you do something so unbearably embarrassing that you just want to shrivel up and die? That’s the feeling of mortification. Which is fitting because the word comes from a root meaning “death.”In other words, mortification is the state of being mortified—humiliated or extremely embarrassed. Things that are humiliating or extremely embarrassing can be described as mortifying.Both mortify and mortification also have meanings that relate to literal death. In medical terms, mortification refers to the death of one part of the body while the rest of the body is alive. This is more technically called gangrene or necrosis.Mortification is also used (less commonly) in a religious context, in which it refers to the ascetic practice of self-discipline with the goal of strengthening one’s will and overcoming the desire to sin. In Christianity, forms of mortification include things like fasting. In some extreme cases, especially in older times, it has included things like self-flagellation—whipping oneself.Example: I can’t even express the sense of mortification I felt when I forgot every single word of my speech and then tripped while trying to run away.
Related Words
See shame.
Other Word Forms
- premortification noun
Etymology
Origin of mortification
First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English mortificacion, from Late Latin mortificātiōn- (stem of mortificātiō ), equivalent to morti- ( mortify ) + -ficatiōn- -fication
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
The last bell saved them from possible mortification.
From BBC
To us, it sounds comically quaint; Queen Victoria would have plotzed from mortification.
From Los Angeles Times
Maybe it was the sense of hopelessness and mortification that made them throw caution, and inferiority, to the wind.
From BBC
None of the above appear in the film, though we see hints of her bodily mortifications and one hungover instance of virtuoso vomiting.
From Los Angeles Times
And when Ma Carruthers hangs a rainbow ornament on the tree for “my gay son” to Jimmy’s mortification, well, at least she’s trying?
From Los Angeles Times
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.