contemn
verb
No English definition recorded for this entry.
L331240 on Wikidata ↗Wiktionary
Pronunciation: /kənˈtɛm/
verb
Etymology: From Middle English contempnen, from Old French contemner, from Latin contemnō (“to scorn”). See also contempt.
- To disdain; to value at little or nothing; to treat or regard with contempt.
“The subject of the following History [...] is the unhappy Lives, and untimely Deaths, of that Unfortunate English King Edward the Second, and his two Favourites Gaveston and Spencer; for his immoderate love to whom, (Says Dr. Heylin) he was hated by the Nobles, and contemned by the Commons.”
“The change which had so suddenly elevated Charles Stuart to the throne of his ancestors, and, from a poor, wandering, and powerless exile, made him one of Europe's most powerful monarchs, had taken the various courts where he had sojourned, neglected, if not contemned, completely by surprise.”
- To commit an offence of contempt, such as contempt of court; to unlawfully flout (e.g. a ruling).