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victim
[ vik-tim ]
noun
- a person who suffers from a destructive or injurious action or agency:
A passing motorist offered assistance to the victims of a car accident.
Victims of workplace abuse are encouraged to speak out.
- a person who is deceived or cheated, as by their own emotions or ignorance, by the dishonesty of others, or by some impersonal agency:
I had fully expected the flight to arrive on time, but I was the victim of misplaced confidence.
The swindler’s victims report losing thousands of dollars in the scheme.
- a person or animal sacrificed or regarded as sacrificed:
war victims.
- a living creature sacrificed in religious rites.
victim
/ ˈvɪktɪm /
noun
- a person or thing that suffers harm, death, etc, from another or from some adverse act, circumstance, etc
victims of tyranny
- a person who is tricked or swindled; dupe
- a living person or animal sacrificed in a religious rite
Usage Note
Usage
Other Words From
- vic·tim·hood noun
- vic·tim·less adjective
- non·vic·tim noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of victim1
Word History and Origins
Origin of victim1
Example Sentences
Security video shows a struggle as the suspect pulls the victim out of her car and she fights him off with the help of a bystander before getting back into the vehicle.
Lucy's family say she was a victim of the system.
In that respect, Cornyn was as much a victim of peaking at the wrong time as anything else.
“Depravity does not adequately describe the callousness involved to kill a human being and then drive around in the victim’s own car with his body inside in order to carry out the rest of his plan,” O.C.
It was in October, when his parents received a letter in the post naming “Richard Rutherford Russell” as director of UCL Tickets Ltd, that Mr Russell realised he had been a victim of identity theft .
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