![]() ![]() Webster's Revised Unabridged English Dictionary ) To scoff to mock to show contumely, derision, or reproach to act disdainfully. ![]() SCORN - (n.) Extreme and lofty contempt haughty disregard that disdain which springs from the opinion of the utter meanness and unworthiness ….SCORN - (n.) An act or expression of extreme contempt.SCORN - (n.) An object of extreme disdain, contempt, or derision.SCORN - (n.) To hold in extreme contempt to reject as unworthy of regard to despise to contemn to disdain.SCORN - (n.) To treat with extreme contempt to make the object of insult to mock to scoff at to deride.▪ public ▪ He has suffered public …Ĭoncise Oxford Thesaurus English vocabulary SCORN - noun ADJECTIVE ▪ withering ▪ She reserved her most withering ~ for journalists.SCORN - Synonyms and related words : abhor, airs, arrogance, be above, be contemptuous of, care nothing for, clannishness, cliquishness, contemn, contempt, ….SCORN - a very great lack of respect for someone or something that you think is bad or worthlessShe ….Researchers …Ĭollins COBUILD Advanced Learner's English Dictionary If you treat someone or something with scorn, you show contempt for them. SCORN - ( scorns, scorning, scorned) 1.Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English scorn 1 /skɔːn $ skɔːrn/ BrE AmE noun [ Date: 1100-1200 Language: Old French Origin: escarn … Oxford Advanced Learner's English Dictionary SCORN - scorn BrE AmE skɔːn AmE skɔːrn ▷ scorned skɔːnd AmE skɔːrnd ▷ scorning ˈskɔːn ɪŋ AmE ˈskɔːrn ɪŋ ▷ scorns ….SCORN - n (13c) 1: open dislike and disrespect ….noun an object of extreme disdain, contempt, or derision.SCORN - noun an act or expression of extreme contempt.Merriam-Webster's Collegiate English vocabulary ˈskȯrn noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French escharne, escar, of Germanic origin akin to Old High German scern jest … Random House Webster's Unabridged English Dictionary open or unqualified contempt disdain: His face and … i.) To scoff to mock to show contumely, derision, or reproach to act disdainfully. Webster's New International English Dictionary ˈskȯ(ə)rn, -ȯ(ə)n noun ( -s ) Etymology: Middle English scarn, scorn, scharn, schorn, from Old French escarn, escharn, escar, … noun Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French escharne, escar, of Germanic origin akin to Old High German scern jest Date: … More meanings of this word and English-Russian, Russian-English translations for the word «SCORN» in dictionaries. Webster's Revised Unabridged English Dictionary. ![]()
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