excoriate
English
WOTD – 3 July 2009
Etymology
First attested in the first part of the 15th century, in Middle English; inherited from Middle English *excoriaten (only attested in its past participle),[1] borrowed from Late Latin excoriātus perfect passive participle of excoriō (“to take the skin or hide off, flay, skin”), from ex- (“out off, from”) + corium (“hide, skin”) + -ō. Regular participial usage of the adjective up until Early Modern English, later archaic.
Pronunciation
- (US) IPA(key): /ɪkˈskɔɹ.iˌeɪt/, /ɪkˈskoʊɹ.iˌeɪt/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Verb
excoriate (third-person singular simple present excoriates, present participle excoriating, simple past and past participle excoriated)
- (transitive) to remove the skin and/or fur of, to flay, to skin
- Synonym: excarnate
- (transitive) To wear off the skin of; to chafe.
- (transitive, figuratively) To strongly condemn or criticize.
- Synonyms: denounce, disparage, reprobate, tear a strip off, criticize, criticise
- The teacher continued to excoriate the student after his academic issues.
- 2004, China Miéville, Iron Council, Trade paperback edition, published 2005, →ISBN, page 464:
- Madeleina di Farja had described Ori, and Cutter had envisaged an angry, frantic, pugnacious boy eager to fight, excoriating his comrades for supposed quiescence.
- 2006 September 13, Patrick Healy, “Spitzer and Clinton Win in N.Y. Primary”, in New York Times[1]:
- Mr. Green, a former city public advocate and candidate for mayor in 2001, ran ads excoriating Mr. Cuomo’s ethics.
- 2022 April 5, Tina Brown, “How Princess Diana’s Dance With the Media Impacted William and Harry”, in Vanity Fair[2]:
- The tabloids branded him forevermore as the “love rat,” and Pasternak was excoriated for peddling mawkish fantasy.
- 2024 September 4, Robert Booth, Emine Sinmaz, “Police under pressure to accelerate criminal investigation into Grenfell fire”, in The Guardian[3]:
- Police are under pressure to accelerate the criminal investigation into the Grenfell Tower fire after an excoriating report found that companies operated with “systematic dishonesty” and that all 72 deaths were avoidable.
Derived terms
Translations
to wear off the skin of
|
to strongly denounce or censure
|
Adjective
excoriate (comparative more excoriate, superlative most excoriate) (obsolete)
- (as a participle) Excoriated.
- c. 1543, Thomas Phaer, translation of Jean Goëvrot's Regiment of Lyfe:
- If the bowelles be excoriate, ye shall gyue thys peculier remedy.
Related terms
References
- ^ “excoriaten”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007.
Anagrams
Latin
Verb
excoriāte
- second-person plural present active imperative of excoriō
Spanish
Verb
excoriate