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  2. ignominy. (n.) 1530s, back-formation from ignominious or else from French ignominie (15c.), from Latin ignominia "disgrace, infamy, loss of a (good) name," from assimilated form of in- "not, opposite of" (see in- (1)) + nomen (genitive nominis) "name" (from PIE root *no-men- "name"). Also sometimes shortened to ignomy.

    • 한국어 (Korean)

      ignominy 뜻: 치욕; 1530년대, ignominious에서 파생된 단어이거나, 아니면 15세기...

    • Français (French)

      Entrées associées ignominy. in- (1) Élément de formation de...

  3. The earliest known use of the noun ignominy is in the early 1500s. OED's earliest evidence for ignominy is from around 1527, in Copy of Lett. wherin Kyng Henry VIII made Answere vnto M. Luther . ignominy is a borrowing from Latin .

  4. The meaning of IGNOMINY is deep personal humiliation and disgrace. How to use ignominy in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Ignominy.

  5. Jun 2, 2024 · Etymology [ edit ] Borrowed from French ignominie , from Latin ignōminia , from ig- ( “ not ” ) + nomen ( “ name ” ) (prefix assimilated form of in- ).

  6. Ignominy is from Latin the ignominia, formed from the prefix in-, "no, not," plus nomen, "name." The implication is that if someone has suffered ignominy, they have lost their good name or reputation.

  7. Word History and Origins. Origin of ignominy 1. C16: from Latin ignōminia disgrace, from ig- (see in- ²) + nōmen name, reputation. Discover More. Synonym Study. See disgrace. Discover More. Example Sentences. One invader exits in ignominy, another force celebrates its triumph. From Ozy.

  8. ĭgnə-mĭnē, -mə-nē. Great personal dishonor or humiliation. A military adventure that ended in ignominy. Loss of one's reputation; shame and dishonor; infamy. Disgraceful, shameful, or contemptible quality, behavior, or act. An instance or source of this. Had suffered many ignominies because of his insensitivity.

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