disdain implies an arrogant or supercilious aversion to what is regarded as unworthy.
disdained popular music
Examples of disdain in a Sentence
NounMcCarthy's indifference to accolades and his disdain for grandstanding … turned into a disdain even for being understood.—Louis Menand, New Yorker, 5 Apr. 2004There is fierce disdain within the Pentagon for the passive U.N. peacekeepers who stood by while thousands were murdered in Bosnia's ethnic cleansing.—Joe Klein, Time, 24 Nov. 2003But for all its playful love of puns and cool disdain for "suits," the high-tech world is, at heart, a cruel, unforgiving place ruled by the merciless dynamics of the marketplace.—Michiko Kakutani, New York Times, 27 June 2002
He regarded their proposal with disdain.
I have a healthy disdain for companies that mistreat their workers. VerbThe right eyes him [Thomas Jefferson] suspiciously as a limousine Jacobin so enamored of revolution that he once suggested we should have one every 20 years. The left disdains him as your basic race hypocrite.—Charles Krauthammer, Time, 22 May 2000Only in our last days on the peninsula (the arm of Antarctica that polar scientists disdain as the "Banana Belt") did we see our first frozen sea …—Kate Ford, Wall Street Journal, 12 June 1998His vehicle would be a form he both enjoyed and disdained—pulp fiction.—Henry Louis Gates, Jr., New York Times Book Review, 20 Sept. 1992There is also evidence of epic womanizing that Mr. Schickel mentions but loftily announces that he disdains to tell us about.—Camille Paglia, New York Times Book Review, 21 July 1991
They disdained him for being weak.
She disdained to answer their questions.
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Noun
The elder Richards was an outspoken feminist who was given to salty one-liners, and who was open about her struggle with alcoholism and her disdain for phoniness, even in her own party.—Jonathan Van Meter, Vogue, 20 Jan. 2025 The conservative movement is, increasingly, driven by disdain for expertise and experience in science, medicine, government and more.—Meredith Blake, Los Angeles Times, 19 Jan. 2025
Verb
Unlike drunkenness and hygiene issues — such as clipping fingernails and taking off shoes — which are widely disdained by fellow passengers, opinions on seat reclining mainly fall into two camps: those who say don’t do it, and others who argue the recline button exists for a reason.—Monica Pitrelli, CNBC, 24 Dec. 2024 As a student at The John Carroll School, Paula Etting disdained public office.—Mike Klingaman, Baltimore Sun, 17 Aug. 2024 See all Example Sentences for disdain
Word History
Etymology
Noun
Middle English desdeyne, from Anglo-French desdaign, from desdeigner — see disdainentry 2
Verb
Middle English desdeynen, from Anglo-French desdeigner, dedeigner, from Vulgar Latin *disdignare, from Latin dis- + dignare to deign — more at deign
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