pejorative
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++LDOCE 5++pe·jo·ra·tive /pɪˈdʒɒrətɪv $ -ˈdʒɔː-, -ˈdʒɑː-/ adjective formal DISAPPROVEa word or expression that is pejorative is used to show disapproval or to insult someone 〔单词或话语〕贬义的,用于侮辱的 For hard-line Republicans, the word ‘liberal’ had become a pejorative term. 对强硬派共和党来说,“自由”一词已成了贬义词。 —pejoratively adverb
Examples from the Corpus
pejorative• The new terminology will quickly become pejorative.• A properly planned and monitored investment programme is needed, but ill informed and pejorative assertions are unhelpful.• The psychiatric model added other, more pejorative, associations with overweight.• And so it acquired its contemporary, pejorative connotation of idle chatter.• I was, and this is the most pejorative label in all of caddying, a bag carrier.• He used the word 'girl' in the pejorative sense when referring to the women who worked for him.• However, we should be wary lest use of such an emotive and pejorative term leads to premature dismissal of legitimate arguments.• During the Industrial Revolution, many Birmingham goods were cheap to buy, but does cheapness justify the pejorative term worthless?Origin pejorative (1800-1900) Late Latin pejoratus, past participle of pejorare “to make worse”, from Latin pejor “worse”pe·jo·ra·tive adjectiveChineseSyllable
that is used expression pejorative Corpus to is or word a show
pejorative
pe‧jo‧ra‧tive /pɪˈdʒɒrətɪv $ -ˈdʒɔː-, -ˈdʒɑː-/
adjective formal
For hard-line Republicans, the word ‘liberal’ had become a pejorative term.
—pejoratively adverb
pe‧jo‧ra‧tive /pɪˈdʒɒrətɪv $ -ˈdʒɔː-, -ˈdʒɑː-/
adjective formal Date: 1800-1900
Language: Late Latin
Origin: pejoratus, past participle of pejorare __to make worse__, from Latin pejor __worse__
a word or expression that is pejorative is used to show disapproval or to insult someone:Language: Late Latin
Origin: pejoratus, past participle of pejorare __to make worse__, from Latin pejor __worse__
—pejoratively adverb