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单词 abuse
释义

abusen.

Brit. /əˈbjuːs/, U.S. /əˈbjus/
Forms: Middle English– abuse, 1600s abusse; Scottish pre-1700 abbus, pre-1700 abose, pre-1700 abusse, pre-1700 pre-1700– abuse, pre-1700 1900s– abuise.
Origin: Of multiple origins. Partly a borrowing from French. Partly a borrowing from Latin. Etymons: French abus; Latin abūsus.
Etymology: < Middle French abus, abbus (French abus ; also in Anglo-Norman as abuse (rare)) excessive exercise of power (1348), misuse, excessive use (1370), error (a1403), excess, disorder (1445), deceit (c1450), bad practice or custom that has become established (1451) and its etymon classical Latin abūsus misuse, wasting, in post-classical Latin also sexual abuse, violation (12th cent. in a British source), malpractice (from 13th cent. in British sources) < abūs- , past participial stem of abūtī abuse v. + -tus , suffix forming verbal nouns. Compare Old Occitan abus (1471), Catalan abús (14th cent.), Spanish abuso (1490), Portuguese abuso (1564), Italian abuso (c1565). Compare abuse v., and earlier abusion n.
1. Improper usage; a corrupt practice or custom; esp. one that has become chronic.
ΚΠ
1439–40 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VI (Electronic ed.) Parl. Nov. 1439 §17. m. 14 The harmes, that..hath ben doon unto hem, by grete abuse of the purveours of his householde.
1483 W. Caxton tr. A. Chartier Curial sig. ij The abuses of the courte..ben suche that a man is neuer suffred tenhaunce hym self.
1536 T. Cromwell Let. 8 June in R. B. Merriman Life & Lett. T. Cromwell (1902) II. 14 Thextirpacion abolicion and extinguishment of suche abuses errours and enormyties.
?1542 H. Brinkelow Complaynt Roderyck Mors i. sig. A6 Such abuses as are to be reformed in the realme.
1649 in J. D. Marwick Rec. Convent. Royal Burghs Scotl. (1878) III. 348 Abusses and dissorderris.
1699 Dr. Tanner in S. Pepys Diary (1879) VI. 186 Some letters about the abuses of Christ's Hospital.
1709 J. Swift Project Advancem. Relig. 61 The Nature of Things is such, that if Abuses be not remedied, they will certainly encrease.
1780 E. Burke Speech Oeconomical Reformation 13 There is a time, when the hoary head of inveterate abuse will neither draw reverence, nor obtain protection.
1808 J. Bentham Sc. Reform 2 The abuses, with which the regular system of procedure is spotted.
1855 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. IV. 121 It seemed perfectly natural that he should defend abuses by which he profited.
1910 J. Evers Baseball in Big Leagues iii. 50 The principal abuses of the system have been by major leagues taking players from lower class leagues.
1957 M. C. Wright Last Stand of Chinese Conservatism 168 What was necessary was an effort to check the worst abuses.
1995 Sun (Baltimore) 8 Aug. a1/6 Financial abuses at Madison were amongst the worst he had seen.
2008 N.Y. Rev. Bks. 6 Nov. 46/1 James Galbraith has likewise placed..the systematic abuse of public institutions for private profit..at the center of his proposed substitute.
2.
a. Wrong or improper use (of something), misuse; misapplication; perversion.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [noun]
abusion?1387
misusing1395
misusea1398
abusingc1450
abuse?1473
misordering1526
abusage1548
misusage1567
misemployment1597
missaw1614
misimprovement1644
abusivenessa1677
misemploying1686
violation1795
?1473 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Recuyell Hist. Troye (1894) I. lf. 21 Hyt were abuse and folye for to speke therof for this present tyme ony more.
1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 59 It is a grete abuse to me for to thinke & haue a renouelement of payne.
?1548 J. Bale Comedy Thre Lawes Nature ii. sig. Cv These two wyll hym so vse, Ich one in their abuse.
1596 W. Warner Albions Eng. (rev. ed.) ix. lii. 238 Yeat things, that of themselues be good, abuse brings out of square.
1640 Englands Complaint to Iesus Christ sig. G There are great grievances..: reading of Apocrypha Books, abuse of Excommunication.
1698 J. Collier Short View Immorality Eng. Stage i. 5 The abuse of a thing is no argument against the use of it.
1702 C. Brent Ess. Nature Guilt & Lying i. 16 They [sc. figurative expressions] are so far from being a lying abuse of Speech, that plain Speaking would not answer all the ends of it without them.
1756 C. Lucas Ess. Waters i. 29 I have observed the same from the abuse of Spa water.
1843 J. S. Mill Syst. Logic I. i. ii. §4. 35 Imitating him in this abuse of language.
1862 Ld. Brougham Brit. Constit. (ed. 3) i. 18 It would be a great abuse of terms to call the Venetian a Mixed Aristocracy.
1875 H. E. Manning Internal Mission of Holy Ghost v. 130 Self-love..is the abuse and perversion of that love of self which is a divine law.
1933 Times 29 Dec. 16/2 The letter..concluded with some pertinent observations on the use and abuse of paper money.
1985 Times 11 Feb. 9/7 The Government would issue directives to stop what he called the abuse of national resources.
1997 G. Carlin Brain Droppings 169 I object to the abuse of the word tragedy. Every time some asshole stops breathing these days it's called a tragedy.
b. Rhetoric. Improper use of words, catachresis. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > inaccuracy, inexactness > incorrectness of language > [noun] > incorrect application of words
abusion1538
abuse1589
catachresis1589
miswording1804
1589 G. Puttenham Arte Eng. Poesie iii. xvi. 150 Catachresis, or the Figure of abuse..if for lacke of naturall and proper terme or worde we take another, neither naturall nor proper and do vntruly applie it to the thing which we would seeme to expresse.
1613 T. Fitzherbert Adioynder to Suppl. R. Persons Discuss. ix. 376 There is no other Catachresis (I meane no other abuse) in all this matter.
1681 T. Delaune & B. Keach Τροπολογία i. 196 Catachresis, is called in Latin Abusio, an abuse,..because the things that are Catachrestical, differ in some things from the Custom of speaking Tropically.
a1716 R. South Serm. Several Occasions (1744) XI. 93 The acception of the word amongst the Greeks and Latines..is through abuse and degeneration.
1784 in tr. F. Rabelais Wks. II. iii. xvii. 302 'Tis spoken, I suppose, by Way of Abuse..as the Latins sometimes call a Swimming-place..by the Name of a Fish-pond.
c. spec. The non-therapeutic or excessive use of a drug; the misuse of any substance, esp. for its stimulant effects. Frequently with distinguishing word.drug, solvent abuse: see the first element.
ΘΚΠ
the world > food and drink > drink > thirst > excess in drinking > [noun]
overdrinkeOE
drinkingc1200
excessc1386
bibbinga1400
bollingc1540
boozingc1540
bousingc1540
swillingc1563
tippling1567
carousing1582
swinking1590
bezzling1598
swill1602
swink1611
overdrinking1616
popination1623
sottishness1648
fuddling1665
toping1668
bibbership1670
abuse1732
dram-drinking1772
dramminga1790
potation1808
spree1811
muzzling1828
bibbery1831
Bacchanalianism1855
Bacchanalism1858
smiling1858
bibulation1882
tanking1891
reeler1950
1732 R. Gwinnett et al. Pylades & Corinna II. xxiii. 94 That Law, which to prevent Drunkenness, and the Abuse of Wine, ordered all Vineyards to be destroyed.
1787 J. Wesley Let. 11 Dec. (1931) VIII. 26 Distilled liquors have their use, but are infinitely overbalanced by the abuse of them.
1856 C. J. Hempel tr. G. H. G. Jahr Homeopathic Treatm. Dis. Females 126 In many cases metrorrhagia is induced by a stimulating diet, abuse of spirits, coffee, drugs.
1885 Dr. Ranney in Harper's Mag. Mar. 641/2 The abuse of stimulants, in the form of alcohol, tobacco, tea, and coffee.
1922 W. H. Ukers All about Coffee xxviii. 437 Too much [caffein] could be ingested from abuse of any beverage containing it.
1961 Drug Addiction (Rep. Interdepartmental Comm., Min. Health & Dept. of Health, Scotl.) 15 The abuse of stimulant drugs such as the amphetamines and phenmetrazine has led to some publicity and concern.
1962 Times 7 May 11/7 Cannabis abuse is very likely to be the forerunner of addiction to more dangerous addicting drugs.
1984 Sunday Times 9 Dec. 3/6 This is a setback for the campaign against increasing heroin abuse among the young.
2009 N.Y. Times 5 May d7/1 Typical high-functioning alcoholics..are in denial about their abuse of alcohol.
d. abuse of notation n. Mathematics a use of notation which, although formally incorrect, is considered convenient or intuitive while being unlikely to cause errors or confusion.
ΚΠ
1953 Ann. Math. 58 85 By abuse of notation, a chain in any complex A(Π, n) can thus be regarded as one in A(Π, n + 1) or in A(Π, n + 2),..without change of notation.
1973 I. Stewart Galois Theory 5 This abuse of notation will cause no confusion as long as it is understood that n may be zero in the field without being zero as an integer.
2008 J. C. Garrison & R. Y. Chiao Quantum Optics iv. 126 The initial condition V(t0) = 1 really should be V(t0) = IQED.., but alert readers will suffer no harm from this slight abuse of notation.
3. The process of using up or wearing out. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > advantage > usefulness > use (made of things) > using up, expending, or consuming > [noun]
spendinga1430
use1440
consumptionc1522
abuse1539
spensec1547
abusinga1555
waste1569
expense1593
dispendium1648
expenditure1812
using-up1863
1539 Bible (Great) Col. ii. 22 Touch not, tast not, handell not: whych all peryeshe thorow the very abuse [ Wyclif vse. Tindale & 1611 vsinge].
4. Imposture, deceit; delusion; an instance of this. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > [noun] > a trick, deception
wrenchc888
swikec893
braida1000
craftOE
wile1154
crookc1175
trokingc1175
guile?c1225
hocket1276
blink1303
errorc1320
guileryc1330
sleightc1340
knackc1369
deceitc1380
japec1380
gaudc1386
syllogism1387
mazec1390
mowa1393
train?a1400
trantc1400
abusionc1405
creekc1405
trickc1412
trayc1430
lirtc1440
quaint?a1450
touch1481
pawka1522
false point?1528
practice1533
crink1534
flim-flamc1538
bobc1540
fetcha1547
abuse1551
block1553
wrinklec1555
far-fetch?a1562
blirre1570
slampant1577
ruse1581
forgery1582
crank1588
plait1589
crossbite1591
cozenage1592
lock1598
quiblin1605
foist1607
junt1608
firk1611
overreach?1615
fob1622
ludification1623
knick-knacka1625
flam1632
dodge1638
gimcrack1639
fourbe1654
juggle1664
strategy1672
jilt1683
disingenuity1691
fun1699
jugglementa1708
spring1753
shavie1767
rig?1775
deception1794
Yorkshire bite1795
fakement1811
fake1829
practical1833
deceptivity1843
tread-behind1844
fly1861
schlenter1864
Sinonism1864
racket1869
have1885
ficelle1890
wheeze1903
fast one1912
roughie1914
spun-yarn trick1916
fastie1931
phoney baloney1933
fake-out1955
okey-doke1964
mind-fuck1971
1551 S. Gardiner Explic. Catholique Fayth f. 86v All this were vayne eloquence, and a mere abuse and illusion, if the Sacramentall tokens were only a figure.
1555 W. Waterman tr. J. Boemus Fardle of Facions Pref. 15 Some he [sc. the deuell] reuersed into their former abuses and errours.
1604 W. Shakespeare Hamlet iv. vii. 49 Or is it some abuse, and no such thing? View more context for this quotation
1653 T. Urquhart tr. F. Rabelais 1st Bk. Wks. xlv. 201 Do the false Prophets teach you such abuses?
1717 T. Lewis Scourge 18 Nov. 354 The People love to be deceiv'd, and place their Abuses among their Blessings, and their Guides glory in the Cheat.
5. Contemptuous or insulting language; reviling, scurrility. Formerly also: a verbal insult.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > malediction > [noun] > abusive language
teleeOE
conteckc1380
contumelyc1386
flitec1400
abuse1559
doggery?1577
vinegar-railing1609
Billingsgate1676
slangwhang1834
tongue-plague1853
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > invective or abuse > [noun]
balec1220
ordurec1390
revile1439
brawlingc1440
railing1466
opprobry?a1475
revilingc1475
vituperation1481
vituper1484
vitupery1489
convicy1526
abusion?1530
blasphemation1533
pelta1540
oblatration?1552
words of mischief1555
abuse1559
inveighing1568
invection1590
revilement1590
invective1602
opprobration1623
invecture1633
thunder and lightning1638
raillery1669
rattlinga1677
blackguarding1742
pillory1770
slang1805
slangwhanging1809
bullyragging1820
slanging1856
bespattering1862
bespatterment1870
bad-mouthing1939
bad mouth1947
slagging1956
flak1968
verbal1970
handbagging1987
pelters1992
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrepute > damage to reputation > slander or calumny > [noun]
teleeOE
folk-leasinga1000
tolec1000
wrayingc1000
missaw?c1225
slanderc1290
disclanderc1300
famationc1325
noisec1325
skander1338
missaying1340
misspeecha1375
slanderingc1380
biting1382
defaminga1400
filtha1400
missaya1400
obloquya1438
oblocution?a1439
juroryc1440
defamationa1450
defamea1450
forspeaking1483
depravinga1500
defamya1513
injury?1518
depravation1526
maledictiona1530
abusion?1530
blasphemation1533
infamation1533
insectationa1535
calumning1541
calumniation?1549
abuse1559
calumnying1563
calumny1564
belying?1565
illingc1575
scandalizing1575
misparlance?1577
blot1587
libelling1587
scandal1596
traducement1597
injurying1604
deprave1610
vilifying1611
noisec1613
disfame1620
sycophancy1622
aspersion1633
disreport1640
medisance1648
bollocking1653
vilification1653
sugillation1654
blasphemya1656
traduction1656
calumniating1660
blaspheming1677
aspersing1702
blowing1710
infamizing1827
malignation1836
mud-slinging1858
mud-throwing1864
denigration1868
mud-flinging1876
dénigrement1883
malignment1885
injurious falsehood1907
mud-sling1919
bad-mouthing1939
bad mouth1947
trash-talking1974
1559 W. Baldwin et al. Myrroure for Magistrates i. 4 Blowen up the blast of all abuse.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Measure for Measure (1623) v. i. 340 Harke how the villaine would close now, after his treasonable abuses . View more context for this quotation
1687 E. Settle Refl. Dryden's Plays Pref. sig. A2v 'Tis a Language that his Vnimitable Impudence more than..his Abuses on the Author have extorted from me.
1759 W. H. Dilworth Life of Pope 77 Mr. Pope bore for a long time the gross abuses thrown out by his adversaries.
a1780 J. Harris Philol. Inq. (1781) iii. xv. 523 For every past age, when present, has been the object of abuse.
1807 Edinb. Rev. 10 115 Unlimited abuse of private characters is another characteristic of the American press.
a1859 T. B. Macaulay Hist. Eng. (1861) V. xxiv. 128 The two parties, after exchanging a good deal of abuse, came to blows.
1898 Argosy Oct. 481 Fleetwood began a string of abuse.
1926 W. Lewis Art of being Ruled v. i. 138 The tone of studied contempt on the one hand, or despairing abuse on the other..is unmerited probably.
1969 W. H. Auden City without Walls 28 Out you would storm, arms whirling, screaming abuse.
2002 Loaded July 39/1 As a term of abuse, the word ‘bastard’ dates back to Elizabethan times.
6.
a. Sexual violation, esp. rape; sexual assault or maltreatment (esp. of a woman or child). Cf. self-abuse n. 3.In later use frequently including also physical or emotional ill-treatment (cf. sense 6b).
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > loss of chastity > [noun] > defilement of chastity or woman > forcible
forcinga1382
oppressionc1395
rapec1425
ravishment1436
rapt1449
violation?1506
violating1523
stuprationa1525
abuse1585
raping?1585
constupration1611
rapture?1615
gang-banging1949
1585 A. Golding tr. P. Mela Worke of Cosmographer i. viii. 15 Women, the first night they are married, shall abandon themselues to the common abuse of all men.
a1586 Sir P. Sidney Arcadia (1590) ii. xviii. sig. Bb1 Was it not inough for him, to haue deceiued me, & through the deceipt abused me, & after the abuse forsaken me?
1630 P. Massinger Picture v. i. 396 Were all that study the abuse of women Us'd thus, the city would not swarm with cuckolds.
a1634 E. Coke 3rd Pt. Inst. Laws Eng. (1644) xi. 60 Rape is felony by the Common law, declared by Parliament for the unlawfull and carnall knowledge and abuse of any woman above the age of ten years against her will.
1766 Spectator No. 533 271 Why should not every contributor to the abuse of chastity suffer death?
1795 J. Macknight New Literal Transl. Apostolical Epist. I. 479 The wretches who suffered this abuse [sc. sodomy] were..called Pathics.
1834 J. Forbes et al. Cycl. Pract. Med. III. 589 By the same act the crime of rape, or of the abuse and carnal knowledge of a girl under ten years of age, is punishable by death.
1860 Law Times 8 Dec. iii. 412 The word abuse is manifestly used as different from the word rape: it may include rape no doubt, or it may not.
1925 K. Mayo Isles of Fear xviii. 204 There are some things that we cannot condone if we accept any commitment from our own Christianity. One of these is the abuse of children. The youngest victim of rape..was three weeks old.
1979 M. Roodkowsky in S. T. Bruyn & P. M. Rayman Nonviolent Action & Social Change iv. xii. 255 Soldiers' abuse of women ranks along with looting, burning and bombing as a means of subduing the enemy.
2010 Tablet 27 Mar. 6/1 I have been deeply disturbed by the information which has come to light regarding the abuse of children and vulnerable young people.
b. Physical or mental maltreatment; the inflicting of physical or emotional harm or damage.Recorded earliest in self-abuse n. 2a.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > ill-treatment > [noun] > amounting to cruelty
abuse1653
abusiveness1905
1653 E. Waterhouse Two Brief Medit. 58 No man hath any warrant for self-abuse: We are not nostri, sed alieni juris; and God will see we shall not destroy his work besides his will.
1698 (title) Lex forcia: being a sensible address to the Parliament for an act to remedy the foul abuse of children at schools.
1791 W. Taplin Gentleman's Stable Directory II. 143 The constant ill usage and violent abuse of horses.
1877 Proc. Trial Joel B. Erhardt et al. 217 More than seven-eighths of the crimes involving personal violence, homicides,..assaults and batteries, the abuse of families and children..may be traced to the use of intoxicating liquors.
1893 Medico-Legal Jrnl. (N.Y.) 10 377 Cruelty signifies abuse, and the law is to be construed in its application, to prevent the abuse of children.
1930 Timber Growing & Logging & Turpentining Pract. in Southern Pine Region (U.S. Dept. Agric. Techn. Bull. No. 204) 105 One obstacle to reforestation..is the condition of these tracts.., as a result of abuse... Most of them have been culled from time to time, until the present stand is only a remnant of the original forest.
1971 Jrnl. Marriage & Family 33 649/2 Emotional abuse or neglect essentially are forms of parental behavior which while not directly damaging to a child physically are considered to be injurious to his emotional and mental health.
1985 J. J. Costa (title) Abuse of the elderly: a guide to resources and services.
2000 Sunday News (Dar-es-Salaam) 26 Mar. 5/2 Zoo Check, a pressure group campaigning against the abuse of animals in the name of entertainment.
7. Injury, wrong; insult; ill-usage. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > harm or injury > [noun]
loathc900
teenOE
ungrithlOE
wemming1100
waningc1175
wrongc1275
prejudicec1300
derea1325
torferc1325
eviltyc1330
griefc1330
wem1338
injurec1374
truitc1390
noyinga1398
inconvenience14..
nocument?a1425
outraya1425
injuryc1430
mischieving1432
supprise1442
incommodityc1450
interess1489
grudge1491
tort1532
wreaka1542
impeachment1548
inconveniency1553
indemnity1556
interestc1575
abuse1595
mischievance1600
oblesion1656
grit1876
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > ill-treatment > [noun]
mishandlinga1393
deraya1400
villainya1400
outraya1425
mistreating1453
mispersoning1522
misentreating1531
misusing1548
misusage1555
misuse1591
abuse1595
hard measure1611
ill usage1621
evil-usage1645
ill-treatment1667
maltreatment1702
mistreatment1716
punishment1811
1595 W. Shakespeare Henry VI, Pt. 3 iii. iii. 188 Did I let passe the abuse done to my neece?
a1616 W. Shakespeare Merry Wives of Windsor (1623) v. iii. 7 My husband will not reioyce so much at the abuse of Falstaffe, as he will chafe at the Doctors marrying my daughter. View more context for this quotation
1682 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) I. 224 Lieutenant Colonel Quiney..offered an abuse to Sir John Lawrence by pulling him down off the hustings.
1704 W. Alexander Short Surv. Lineal Descent Sovereign Princes i. ii. 40 He [sc. Edward III]..to revenge the abuse done him in France, enters Normandy.
1784 Anc. & Present State Youghall iii. 91 I had sundry Papers..which might discover a great deal of wrong and abuse done to the Queen.

Phrases

abuse of process n. Law the improper use of a legal process for a purpose other than that intended by the law; a tort (tort n. 2) where damage is caused by such use.
ΚΠ
1785 C. Lofft Ess. Law of Libels 78 He then enumerates the cases in which this power has been exerted against..attornies for mal-practices of various sorts in abuse of process.
1822 Ann. Law Reg. U.S. 4 1218/1 If there is fraud or irregularity in the sale, the court out of which the writ issued..would, in a summary manner, inquire into it on a rule to show cause, notice or other proper proceeding, and relieve, by setting aside the sale, on the ground of abuse of process, misconduct or irregularity of the officer or the party.
1925 Yale Law Jrnl. 34 309 A judgment was rendered against a City Magistrate for malicious prosecution and abuse of process.
2009 Private Eye 27 Nov. 9/3 Judge after judge described the charges as an abuse of process.

Compounds

(Chiefly in sense 6.)
C1. General attributive, as abuse problem, abuse scandal, etc.
ΚΠ
1919 C. L. Brown Municipal Court & Home: Addr. to Forum of Y.M.C.A., Apr. 27, at Philadelphia 5 To us, in our Court, may come oftener problems of intemperance or abuse problems.., but, on the whole, we get the same personal and temperamental problems as appear in homes anywhere.
1923 Electric Railway Jrnl. 23 June 1043/1 The abuse factor also contributes largely to the growth. The engineer states that the looseness of the present system, combined with the lack of systematic checking, has invited and encouraged abuse.
1968 J. H. Jaffe in D. H. Efron Psychopharmacol. viii. 854/1 Nalorphine has virtually no abuse potential; its subjective effects are not ‘liked’ by post-addicts.
1989 T. S. Trepper & M. J. Barett Systemic Treatm. Incest 5 Therapists..who were abused..may want to be abuse therapists to resolve their own family experience.
1995 J. Healy Rescue (1996) 230 ‘You don't have some kind of Domestic Violence unit here?’ ‘We do. Got an Abuse Hotline down on Key West, though that's mostly for children and the elderly.’
2010 Guardian (Nexis) 19 Mar. 34 The suppression of truth at the heart of the abuse scandal will bewilder the Catholic faithful.
C2.
abuse allegation n.
ΚΠ
1958 Ironwood (Mich.) Daily Globe 29 Mar. 1/2 (heading) Other FCC commissioners face abuse allegations.
2010 J. F. Gainsborough Scandalous Politics v. 114 The resulting state investigation faulted the..agencies for not following procedures in previous abuse allegation investigations involving the family.
abuse case n.
ΚΠ
1891 Daily Gleaner (Kingston, Jamaica) 13 Oct. 2/5 After some unimportant abuse cases were disposed of the Court adjourned.
2002 N.Y. Times 7 Apr. 12/6 The cardinal has adopted..a new..approach to the church crisis..harshly criticizing a church lawyer for dragging her feet in telling the police of three abuse cases.
abuse charge n.
ΚΠ
1904 Lima (Ohio) Times Democrat 31 Dec. Abuse charges that could not, be substantiated against wife and daughter, and finally abandonment led to the granting of a divorce to the plaintiff.
2006 R. M. Thomas Violence in America's Schools v. 102 Even when a person is exonerated of an abuse charge, the publicity that accompanied the event..can linger on.
abuse counselling n.
ΚΠ
1988 M. D. Pellauer et al. Sexual Assault xi. 120 Some abuse counseling will ask more of us as counselors than we can give.
2009 H. Cefrey Domest. Violence ii. 27 If an abuser desires to be reunited with his or her family, the courts may require him or her to undergo abuse counseling or an intervention program.
abuse counsellor n.
ΚΠ
1984 Winnipeg Free Press 24 Feb. 2/1 The relationship between the principal characters in Gone With the Wind underlines the way in which society condones deviant behavior, an abuse counsellor told a conference on family violence.
2010 Sunday Life (Belfast) (Nexis) 11 July 36 Suggest that your husband speaks to an abuse counsellor.
abuse victim n.
ΚΠ
1927 Syracuse (N.Y.) Herald 19 Apr. 5/6 (heading) 2 boys, alleged abuse victims, get good homes.
2002 Washington Post 1 Dec. (Home ed.) (Mag.) 32/1 He suffers from dissociative disorder, a common reaction of abuse victims who block out memories in order to survive.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022).

abusev.

Brit. /əˈbjuːz/, U.S. /əˈbjuz/
Forms: late Middle English– abuse, 1500s abbuse; Scottish pre-1700 abeise, pre-1700 abose, pre-1700 aboys, pre-1700 abusse, pre-1700 abvse, pre-1700 abwse, pre-1700 1700s– abuse, 1800s abase, 1900s– abaise, 1900s– abeese, 1900s– abuize. See also buse v.
Origin: A borrowing from French. Etymon: French abuser.
Etymology: < Anglo-Norman and Middle French abuser (French abuser ) to deceive (c1270 in Old French), to misuse, put to wrong use (1312), to make a mistake, be mistaken (c1340), probably < an unattested post-classical Latin form *abusare < classical Latin abūsus , past participle of abūti to use up, to squander, waste, to make full use of, utilize, to take advantage of, exploit, to put to wrong use, to misinterpret, misrepresent, to misuse (language), in post-classical Latin also to violate, to maltreat or injure (Vulgate), not to use (5th cent.) < ab- ab- prefix + ūti use v. Compare Old Occitan abusar (1455), Catalan abusar (1450), Spanish abusar (14th cent.), Portuguese abusar (1533), Italian abusare (1581). Compare abuse n., and earlier abusion n.
1.
a. transitive. To use (something) improperly, to misuse; to make a bad use of; to pervert; to take advantage of wrongly.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > misuse > [verb (transitive)]
misnote?c1225
disusec1380
misusea1382
abusec1430
misbehave?1529
misemploy1609
misdemeana1625
misimprove1648
c1430 Acts Parl. Scotl. (1844) I. 333/2 At thai aboysis thar seruice.
a1475 (?a1430) J. Lydgate tr. G. Deguileville Pilgrimage Life Man (Vitell.) 23631 The good that god hath sent by hir thei ben wrongly dispent, And ageyn his wul abused.
1533 J. Bellenden tr. Livy Hist. Rome (1901) I. ii. xix. 202 The romanis..abusit al þare pussance with civil contentiouns.
1550 in Acts Privy Council (1891) III. 170 It was convenyent to take downe the aultars as thinges abused.
1578 J. Lyly Euphues f. 38v How wantonly, yea, and howe willingly haue wee abused our golden time.
1611 Bible (King James) 1 Cor. ix. 18 Verily that, when I preach the gospel, I may make the gospel of Christ without charge, that I abuse not my power in the gospel. View more context for this quotation
1664 B. Gerbier Counsel to Builders (new ed.) i. sig. c3 With more I shall not presume to abuse your Lordships Patience.
1708 Acct. Remarkable Passages Life Private Gentleman iii. 290 Many are Sick and Weak, and others fall asleep for abusing it [sc. God's mercy].
1771 ‘Junius’ Stat Nominis Umbra (1772) II. lxi. 283 The liberty of the press may be abused.
1817 W. Scott Rob Roy I. i. 6 I dare not promise that I may not abuse the opportunity so temptingly offered me.
1828 Blackwood's Mag. June 933/2 These laws are abused upon assumptions which are obviously false and impossible.
1876 E. A. Freeman Hist. Norman Conquest II. x. 503 Restoring his brother to the authority which he had so abused.
1916 A. A. Brill tr. S. Freud Wit & its Relation to Unconsc. vi. 250 ‘Wish fulfilment’—a term easily remembered and easily abused.
1970 C. Ojeda & J. Castro tr. A. A. Marche Luzon & Palawan viii. 122 Many have abused the hospitality of residents, and the Filipinos have become cautious.
1998 Daily Tel. 4 Sept. 18/3 Even if it is decided that Mr Clinton has abused his office, Congress members may not want to get rid of him.
b. intransitive. To behave improperly. Obsolete. rare.
ΚΠ
?a1475 Ludus Coventriae (1922) 65 (MED) Whow durste þou a-monge fruteful presume and Abuse.
c. transitive. To use (something) in error, to mistake for (another thing). Obsolete. rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > disregard for truth, falsehood > lack of truth, falsity > take wrongly, mistake [verb (transitive)] > do wrongly
misworkc1300
mistakea1382
abuse1548
1548 W. Turner Names of Herbes sig. C.viijv One is gardine Rokket, whiche is muche greater then the other, & it hath a white leafe, some abuse thys for whyte mustarde.
1551 W. Turner Herball (1568) i. 41 Some have abused long smallage for persely, wherein they have been deceived.
d. transitive. To use (alcohol, etc.) excessively; to use (a drug) without medical justification.
ΘΚΠ
the world > physical sensation > use of drugs and poison > take drugs [verb (transitive)]
abuse1901
drop1966
do1969
misuse1970
1831 S. Nott Temperance & Relig. ii. 19 The more wealthy members of society, only, have been able to abuse wine.
1854 Littell's Living Age 29 July 213 Young men who have led an irregular life, who have abused wine at the inns.
1901 Pharmaceut. Jrnl 19 Jan. p. b/2 In his opinion opium was a necessity, a luxury, and a stimulant, and the percentage of those who abused opium was so small as not to be noticeable.
1960 Brit. Med. Jrnl. 10 Dec. 241/1 Dr. Lawlor said he found it impossible to find anyone who could swear that he was not abusing drugs.
1972 E. H. Ellinwood in E. H. Ellinwood & S. Cohen Current Concepts on Amphetamine Abuse xiv. 146/1 The greatest increase in libido was often noted in women..who had been relatively frigid prior to abusing amphetamines.
2002 Time 11 Feb. 67/1 Xanax..ranks low on the scale of drugs most likely to be abused.
2. transitive. To misrepresent (a person or thing); to adulterate; to falsify. reflexive. To show oneself in false colours, to make false pretensions. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > affected behaviour or affectation > act affectedly [verb (reflexive)]
abuse?a1439
plume1637
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > misrepresentation > misrepresent [verb (transitive)]
disguise1398
colourc1400
abuse?a1439
wrest1524
beliec1531
to spell (one) backward1600
misuse1609
bowa1616
falsify1630
misrepresent1633
traduce1643
garble1659
miscolour1661
misrender1674
travesty1825
misdescribe1827
skew1872
misportray1925
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > dissimulation, pretence > pretend, dissemble [verb (reflexive)]
feign1297
abuse?a1439
counterfeit1610
personate1710
to pass off1770
to hold out1829
to work off1894
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > dissimulation, pretence > semblance, outward show > present speciously [verb (transitive)] > conceal real state
dissimulec1374
feigna1393
shroud1412
abuse?a1439
counterfeit1490
cloak1509
dissemblea1535
maska1593
dissimulate1610
disguisea1616
pretext1634
mascherate1654
veil1700
camouflage1917
the world > food and drink > drink > manufacture of alcoholic drink > wine-making > [verb (transitive)] > treat, adulterate, or flavour
abuse1574
trick1594
juniperate1605
parel1615
part1682
pearl1682
manage1686
load1860
liqueur1872
plaster1886
the world > relative properties > wholeness > mutual relation of parts to whole > condition or state of being mixed or blended > mix or blend [verb (transitive)] > add as ingredient to a mixture > qualify by admixture > adulterate
adulterc1384
feigna1398
sophisticatec1400
infect?1440
counterfeit1495
adulterate?1526
dash1548
falsify1562
elay1573
abuse1574
base1581
corrupt1581
debase1591
adulterize1593
compass1594
sophisticate1604
allay1634
huckster1642
hucksterize1646
cauponize1652
alloy1661
balderdash1674
impurify1693
doctor1726
vitiate1728
sand1851
dope1898
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) ix. l. 199 (MED) With litil greyn your chaff ye can abuse.
1509 S. Hawes Pastime of Pleasure xviii. 84 O goodd madame! though that they abused Them to theyr ladyes in theyr great deceyte, Yet am I true.
1574 T. Newton tr. G. Gratarolo Direct. Health Magistrates & Studentes sig. Hij Wyne is mingled with Hony, to make it sweete and pleasant. If it be thus abused and mixed, it may be easely knowen.
1609 T. Dekker Ravens Almanacke (STC 6519.2) sig. H3v Richard the Rope-maker..had abused himselfe to all his wiues.
1697 View Penal Laws 243 None selling Wines in Gross shall abuse or mix any of them with other Ingredients.
1702 Eng. Theophrastus Pref. 4 How miserably that noble author has been abused by his Translators.
1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones VI. xvii. ii. 93 He hath been abused, grossly abused to you. View more context for this quotation
3.
a. transitive. To misuse the confidence of (someone); to betray (a person's trust, confidence, etc.); to mislead; to cheat, to deceive. Cf. disabuse v. 2 Now rare.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > deceive [verb (transitive)]
aschrenchc885
blendc888
swikec950
belirtOE
beswike971
blencha1000
blenka1000
belieOE
becatchc1175
trokec1175
beguile?c1225
biwrench?c1225
guile?c1225
trechec1230
unordainc1300
blink1303
deceivec1320
feintc1330
trechetc1330
misusea1382
blind1382
forgo1382
beglose1393
troil1393
turnc1405
lirt?a1425
abuse?a1439
ludify1447
amuse1480
wilec1480
trump1487
delude?a1505
sile1508
betrumpa1522
blear1530
aveugle1543
mislippen1552
pot1560
disglose1565
oversile1568
blaze1570
blirre1570
bleck1573
overtake1581
fail1590
bafflea1592
blanch1592
geck?a1600
hallucinate1604
hoodwink1610
intrigue1612
guggle1617
nigglea1625
nose-wipe1628
cog1629
cheat1637
flam1637
nurse1639
jilt1660
top1663
chaldese1664
bilk1672
bejuggle1680
nuzzlec1680
snub1694
bite1709
nebus1712
fugle1719
to take in1740
have?1780
quirk1791
rum1812
rattlesnake1818
chicane1835
to suck in1842
mogue1854
blinker1865
to have on1867
mag1869
sleight1876
bumfuzzle1878
swop1890
wool1890
spruce1917
jive1928
shit1934
smokescreen1950
dick1964
the mind > mental capacity > knowledge > conformity with what is known, truth > deceit, deception, trickery > cheating, fraud > treat fraudulently, cheat [verb (transitive)]
deceivec1330
defraud1362
falsec1374
abuse?a1439
fraud1563
visure1570
cozen1583
coney-catch1592
to fetch in1592
cheat1597
sell1607
mountebanka1616
dabc1616
nigglea1625
to put it on1625
shuffle1627
cuckold1644
to put a cheat on1649
tonya1652
fourbe1654
imposturea1659
impose1662
slur1664
knap1665
to pass upon (also on)1673
snub1694
ferret1699
nab1706
shool1745
humbug1750
gag1777
gudgeon1787
kid1811
bronze1817
honeyfuggle1829
Yankee1837
middle1863
fuck1866
fake1867
skunk1867
dead-beat1888
gold-brick1893
slicker1897
screw1900
to play it1901
to do in1906
game1907
gaff1934
scalp1939
sucker1939
sheg1943
swizz1961
butt-fuck1979
a1439 J. Lydgate Fall of Princes (Bodl. 263) vi. l. 131 (MED) My play is double, my trust is euer abusid.
c1475 tr. C. de Pisan Livre du Corps de Policie (Cambr.) (1977) 97 (MED) The good prynce..may be abused by suche men as vndir the shadowe of connyng make theimselfe wyse and be not so in dede.
1481 W. Caxton tr. Myrrour of Worlde ii. ix. sig. f7 Wherof..the maronners sayllyng by this see ben gretly deceyued and abused.
c1500 Melusine (1895) 311 It is som spyryt, som fantosme or Illusyon that thus hath abused me.
1554 D. Lindsay Dialog Experience & Courteour i. 1004 in Wks. (1931) I Rychtso the woman hir excusit, And said: ‘the serpent me abusit.’
?a1610 A. Montgomerie Poems (1887) xviii. 51 Blind love his reson so abvsit.
1649 Bp. J. Taylor Great Exemplar iii. 65 He was abused into the act by a Prophet.
1702 Eng. Theophrastus 248 A Prince that desires by means of his Ambassador to deceive any other Prince, must first abuse his own Ambassador, to the end he should speak with the more earnestness.
1776 J. Wesley Wks. (1830) IV. 39 Many saw how miserably they had been abused by those vulgarly called Gospel Preachers.
1839 Documents Senate N.Y. 1839 III. 35 The community has been abused and deceived, for years, by the constant reiteration of the falsehood, that the Erie and Champlain canals were enriching the State.
1865 ‘M. Harland’ Husbands & Homes xiii. 135 I had forfeited your esteem, abused your confidence, deceived you in every respect.
1916 W. B. Trites Love ix. 147 What I gathered, ere he hurriedly changed the subject, was that Christine had abused, had deceived him.
b. transitive. In passive. To be deceived, mistaken. to be abused upon or in: to form a mistaken idea of (something), to fall into error about. Also reflexive. Obsolete.
ΚΠ
1477 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Hist. Jason (1913) 55 If ye Iuge the disposicion of my body after the colour of my face ye be gretly abused.
1525 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles II. ccxxiv. [ccxx.] 703 The Christen men were abused vpon ii. popes..some beleuyng on the one pope, and some vpon the other.
1525 Ld. Berners tr. J. Froissart Cronycles II. ccxxv. [ccxxi.] 704 [He] had great dout that he was sore abused in those two popes.
1605 F. Bacon Of Aduancem. Learning i. sig. L2 You are much abused, if you thinke your vertue can withstand the Kings power. View more context for this quotation
1660 J. Howell Lex. Tetraglotton Dict. (at cited word) Thou dost abuse thyself grossly: Tu t' abuses tout a fait.
a1718 W. Penn Tracts in Wks. (1726) I. 766 That so we may not profane the name of God..nor abuse our selues unto Eternal Perdition.
1775 J. Cartwright Amer. Independence (new ed.) Postscript. 19 The people of Great-Britain, notwithstanding how greatly they are abused in this particular, do feel that they enjoy an actual and virtual representation, such as it is.
1848 Boston Med. & Surg. Jrnl. 24 May 334 Upon this subject the community is grossly abused and deceived.
4. transitive. To inflict a sexual act regarded as illicit or unnatural (such as fornication, incest, sodomy, etc.) on (a person); to assault (esp. a woman or child) sexually; to violate, rape. Also reflexive: to behave in a licentious manner; (in later use) to masturbate.
ΘΚΠ
society > morality > moral evil > licentiousness > unchastity > loss of chastity > deprive of chastity [verb (transitive)] > assault sexually
abuse1447
rouze1582
touse1624
tousle1839
molest1902
interfere1948
1447 O. Bokenham Lives of Saints (Arun.) (1938) l. 4291 (MED) Wyth comoun wummen þou shalt abusyd be.
?a1475 (?a1425) tr. R. Higden Polychron. (Harl. 2261) (1872) IV. 365 (MED) Caligula..abusenge his sustres, puttenge theym in to exile after that abusion.
1531 W. Tyndale Answere Mores Dialoge f. xcviij The church permitteth to abuse mens wiues and sofereth sodomitrie.
1542 N. Udall tr. Erasmus Apophthegmes i. 137 Mencion was made of a boye in moste detestable abomynacion abused.
1554 D. Lindsay Dialog Experience & Courteour i. 1236 in Wks. (1931) I Quhow men and wemen schamefullye Abusit thame selfis vnnaturallye.
1611 Bible (King James) Judges xix. 25 And abused her all the night vntil the morning. View more context for this quotation
1652 G. Winstanley Law of Freedom in Platform i. 24 If any man do force or abuse women in folly, pleading Community, the Laws following do punish such ignorant and unrational practise.
1699 T. D'Urfey Famous Hist. Rise & Fall Massaniello (1700) ii. i. ii. 8 They..are so horribly given to scandal, that they'l abuse all Woman-kind.
1766 J. Fordyce Serm. Young Women I. i. 9 He that abuses you dishonours his mother.
1839 M. Ryan Prostitution in London 305 He cites the case of a young man, who greatly abused himself from the age of fifteen.
1864 G. W. Balfour tr. J. L. Casper Handbk. Pract. Forensic Med. III. 332 One solitary case of a boy alleged to have been abused paederastically.
1886 Northwestern Reporter 26 46 The complainant..made complaint that she had been abused and ravished.
1931 C. Y. Harrison Child is Born 136 Miss Roberts was then taken to a garage on E. 104th St., where, she alleges several other men abused her against her will.
1987 Guardian (Nexis) 22 Oct. The boy alleged he had been abused by his stepfather.
2003 J. R. Lennon Mailman i. vi. 313 He had done it, before—abused himself, that is, loved himself, brought himself off, choked the chicken.
5. transitive. Scottish. To disuse, give up (something); to neglect. Obsolete.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > customary or habitual mode of behaviour > unaccustomedness or state of disuse > give up a habit or practice [verb (transitive)]
leaveeOE
forsakec1175
waive1340
twinc1386
refuse1389
to set aside1426
relinquish1454
abuse1471
renouncec1480
disaccustom1483
to break from1530
to lay aside1530
disprofess1590
dropa1616
to set bya1674
decline1679
unpractise?1680
slough1845
shake1872
sluff1934
kick1936
the world > action or operation > harm or detriment > disadvantage > uselessness > non-use > refrain from using [verb (transitive)] > cease to use
leaveeOE
to lay downa1450
abuse1471
disuse1487
to leave off1570
sink1705
to put down1733
to hang up (one's sword, gun, etc.)1826
1471 in Rec. Parl. Scotl. to 1707 (2007) 1471/5/6 At [= That] the futbal and golf be abusit in tym cummynge, and the buttis maid up and schot usit.
1527 in A. J. Warden Dundee Burgh Laws (1872) 100 We ordaine that article to be abused fra all outmen.
c1540 J. Bellenden tr. H. Boece Hyst. & Cron. Scotl. vii. vi. f. 84v/2 Thay conuenit in Argile..to lerne thair pepyll the art of cheualry. For thay war mony ȝeris abusit but ony exercition thairof.
a1568 A. Scott Poems (1896) xxxiv. 107 The mull frequentis the anis, And hir awin kynd abusis.
6. transitive. To mistreat (a person or thing); to injure, hurt; to wrong.In quot. c1500: to cast (a person) down, to crush.
ΘΚΠ
the mind > goodness and badness > harmfulness > [verb (transitive)] > to person or thing
werdec725
wemc900
forworkOE
evilc1000
teenOE
grievec1230
misdoc1230
mischievec1325
shond1338
endamagec1374
unrighta1393
damagea1400
disvail14..
disavail1429
mischief1437
outrayc1440
prejudice1447
abuse?1473
injuryc1484
danger1488
prejudicate1553
damnify?a1562
wrack1562
inviolate1569
mislestc1573
indemnify1583
qualify1584
interess1587
buse1589
violence1592
injure1597
bane1601
envya1625
prejudiciala1637
founder1655
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > ill-treatment > ill-treat [verb (transitive)]
tuckc888
tawc893
misbedeOE
graithc1330
to fare fair or foul with1340
misusea1382
outrayc1390
beshrewc1430
huspelc1440
misentreat1450
mistreat1453
abuse?1473
to mayne evil1481
demean1483
to put (a person) to villainya1513
harry1530
mishandle1530
touse1531
misorder1550
worrya1556
yark1565
mumble1588
buse1589
crow-tread1593
disabuse1607
maltreat1681
squeeze1691
ill-treat1794
punish1801
tousle1826
ill-use1841
razoo1890
mess1896
to play horse with1896
to bugger about1921
slug1925
to give (a person) the works1927
to kick about or around1938
mess1963
?1473 W. Caxton tr. R. Le Fèvre Recuyell Hist. Troye (1894) I. lf. 61 By your propre declaracion I will in no wise abuse yow.
c1500 Three Kings' Sons (1895) 16 The kynges folkes..were so abused that they made but litle prese.
?1548 J. Bale Comedy Thre Lawes Nature 615 Beastes to abuse most monstruouslye.
1556 W. Lauder Compend. Tractate Dewtie of Kyngis sig. B4 And geue thay haue, the floke abusit Ȝe Kyngs sall be, for that accusit.
1611 Bible (King James) 2 Macc. xiv. 42 Chusing rather to die manfully, then to come into the hands of the wicked to be abused otherwise then beseemed his noble birth. View more context for this quotation
a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) Berks. 85 Abusing their servants with too little meat or sleep.
1691 N. Luttrell Diary in Brief Hist. Relation State Affairs (1857) II. 315 The duke of Norfolke was abused in the fray at the playhouse.
1715 Abstr. Penal Laws Customs, & Excise 3 Persons so hindring, abusing said Officers and Informers shall be Imprisoned.
1756 E. Burke Vindic. Nat. Society 39 In this kind of government human nature is not only abused and insulted, but it is actually degraded.
1847 Rep. Commissioners Inq. Millbank Prison 114 Did Farraway leave on account of ill-treatment?—He was much ill-used and abused, I believe.
1881 Child's Friend Nov. 174 Now, there's Mr. Peters; he gets drunk and abuses his wife, and papa has to go and take care of him.
1917 L. Carnovale Why Italy entered Great War i. xiii. 61 [He] invaded Tuscany; raided towns, despoiled and abused the populace.
1966 New Statesman 8 Apr. 512/2 Doomed Mr Hamilton is dragged about, manacled to a great cross-piece and generally abused.
1995 B. Bryson Notes from Small Island (1996) xxv. 305 Far too many of the Georgian buildings had been clumsily abused by the addition of modern frontages.
2005 2600 Summer 48/1 People engaging in peaceful demonstrations have been clubbed, pepper sprayed,..and otherwise abused for trying to shape a better world.
7. transitive. To speak insultingly or unkindly of or to (a person); to malign, revile, vilify (a person or thing).
ΘΚΠ
the mind > language > malediction > [verb (transitive)] > abuse, scold, or wrangle
chidec1230
revilea1393
to call (rarely to speak) (all) to naught1542
vituperate1542
abuse1592
to speak or look daggers1603
outrage1608
cuss1831
slangwhang1880
strafe1915
slag1958
name-call1960
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disapproval > invective or abuse > abuse [verb (transitive)]
vilea1300
rebutc1330
revilea1393
arunt1399
stainc1450
brawl1474
vituper1484
rebalk1501
to call (rarely to speak) (all) to naught1542
rattle1542
vituperate1542
bedaub1570
beray1576
bespurt1579
wring1581
misuse1583
caperclaw1589
abuse1592
rail1592
exagitate1593
to shoot atc1595
belabour1596
to scour one's mouth on1598
bespurtle1604
conviciate1604
scandala1616
delitigate1623
betongue1639
bespatter1644
rant1647
palt1648
opprobriatea1657
pelt1658
proscind1659
inveigh1670
clapperclaw1692
blackguard1767
philippize1804
drub1811
foul-mouth1822
bullyrag1823
target1837
barge1841
to light on ——1842
slang1844
villainize1857
slangwhang1880
slam-bang1888
vituperize1894
bad-mouth1941
slag1958
zing1962
to dump on (occasionally all over)1967
the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrepute > damage to reputation > slander or calumny > slander or calumniate [verb (transitive)]
to say or speak shame of, on, byc950
teleeOE
sayOE
to speak evil (Old English be) ofc1000
belie?c1225
betell?c1225
missayc1225
skandera1300
disclanderc1300
wrenchc1300
bewrayc1330
bite1330
gothele1340
slanderc1340
deprave1362
hinderc1375
backbite1382
blasphemec1386
afamec1390
fame1393
to blow up?a1400
defamea1400
noise1425
to say well (also evil, ill, etc.) of (also by)1445
malignc1450
to speak villainy of1470
infame1483
injury1484
painta1522
malicea1526
denigrate1526
disfamea1533
misreporta1535
sugill?1539
dishonest?c1550
calumniate1554
scandalize1566
ill1577
blaze1579
traduce1581
misspeak1582
blot1583
abuse1592
wronga1596
infamonize1598
vilify1598
injure?a1600
forspeak1601
libel1602
infamize1605
belibel1606
calumnize1606
besquirt1611
colly1615
scandala1616
bedirt1622
soil1641
disfigurea1643
sycophant1642
spatter1645
sugillate1647
bespattera1652
bedung1655
asperse1656
mischieve1656
opprobriatea1657
reflect1661
dehonestate1663
carbonify1792
defamate1810
mouth1810
foul-mouth1822
lynch1836
rot1890
calumny1895
ding1903
bad-talk1938
norate1938
bad-mouth1941
monster1967
1592 Arden of Feversham sig. Ev To let thee know I am no coward, I tel thee, Shakbag, thou abusest me.
a1616 W. Shakespeare Othello (1622) v. i. 125 I am no strumpet, but of life as honest, As you, that thus abuse me. View more context for this quotation
1680 T. Otway Orphan ii. 17 What have I done? and why do you abuse me?
1739 J. Miller Hosp. for Fools 9 She abuses him in the grossest manner, so that half the Town laugh at him.
1758 D. Garrick Gamesters Prol. These well bred letter-writers..Embrace us, eat our meat, and then—abuse us.
1839 T. Keightley Hist. Eng. II. 52 A preface in which the Pope was abused in the most virulent terms.
1883 W. Black Shandon Bells xxx We could not have one of our own reviewers abused in our own reviewing columns.
1911 H. S. Harrison Queed iv. 42 West..abused himself for a shiftless lackwit.
1949 ‘G. Orwell’ Nineteen Eighty-four i. i. 16 He was abusing Big Brother, he was denouncing the dictatorship of the Party.
1973 V. Teresa & T. C. Renner My Life in Mafia ii. 15 They were abused and cursed,..pilloried and insulted in this new land of freedom.
2009 I. Thomson Dead Yard xi. 132 Jamaican men, possibly because they associated his love of plants with an effeminate nature, abused him.
8. intransitive. To subject a person (esp. a woman or child) to physical, sexual, or emotional abuse.
ΘΚΠ
the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > ill-treatment > ill-treat [verb (intransitive)]
tucka1250
to do villainy or a villainy1303
abuse1978
the mind > emotion > fear > quality of inspiring fear > quality of being intimidating > intimidate or bully [verb (intransitive)]
bully1733
browbeat1812
abuse1978
1978 R. S. Kempe & C. H. Kempe Child Abuse v. 79 Since the abused grow up to abuse, the intervention and treatment we offer serve not only to protect children now: they help to break the chain that binds future generations.
1981 K. C. Faller Social Work with Abused & Neglected Children 9 This survey indicates that mothers are more likely to abuse than fathers.
1996 J. D. McNeil in L. N. June & M. Parker Men to Men x. 170 Most men who abuse suffer from a deep sense of depression, shame, and inadequacy. Their abusive rages are often stimulated by..their unconscious feeling of needing to control a spouse.
1998 Community Care 7 May 7/3 A report has praised the probation service's work with sex offenders but laments the fact that it is failing adolescents who abuse.
2008 C. Gibson & V. M. Vandiver Juvenile Sex Offenders v. 127 Not enough research exists to fully answer the question of whether juvenile girls who sexually offend continue to abuse.
This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2011; most recently modified version published online June 2022).
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