The bombing of the church was met with widespread opprobrium.
Did you know?
Opprobrium was borrowed into English from Latin in the 17th century. It derives from the Latin verb opprobrare, which means "to reproach." That verb, in turn, came from the noun probrum, meaning "disgraceful act" or "reproach." The adjective form of opprobrium is opprobrious, which in English means "scurrilous" or "infamous." One might commit an "opprobrious crime" or be berated with "opprobrious language," for example. Probrum gave English another word too, but you might have a little trouble guessing it. It is exprobrate, an archaic synonym of censure and upbraid
They're going ahead with the plan despite public opprobrium. saw no reason why “secretary” should suddenly become a term of opprobrium among the politically correct
Recent Examples on the WebMany European and American players have decamped while the few who remain have been subjected to considerable opprobrium. Fred Weir, The Christian Science Monitor, 25 Aug. 2022 This isn’t about a love for Jewish individuals but a love for a strong, isolated country that embodies a macho Judeo-Christian heritage, is vengeful and subdues its foes, and practices robust self-defense in the face of global opprobrium. Jordan Michael Smith, The New Republic, 9 Aug. 2022 Countries in Latin America came under particularly harsh criticism in the U.S. State Department’s annual report on human rights, with allies such as Mexico and adversaries including Nicaragua facing similar opprobrium. Tracy Wilkinsonstaff Writer, Los Angeles Times, 12 Apr. 2022 Though public outrage can sway decision-makers in Hollywood, European opprobrium remains less of a factor. Tatiana Siegel, Rolling Stone, 25 May 2022 This is perhaps why the reforming Meghan Markle, a Hollywood outsider uncharmed by the Windsor way, receives such opprobrium. Charles Arrowsmith, Los Angeles Times, 25 Apr. 2022 Asked whether Candle Media intended to continue its partnership with Will Smith, who has faced opprobrium since slapping comedian Chris Rock at the Oscars last weekend, Mayer said there were no plans to divest Candle Media’s stake in Westbrook. K.j. Yossman, Variety, 4 Apr. 2022 If bad governments veer into committing war crimes and genocide, then the Western companies who work with these regimes risk the same opprobrium that befell Swiss banks, Ford, and IBM for their collaboration with Nazi Germany. David Kamenetzky And Leopoldo López, Fortune, 21 Apr. 2022 The collaborative act opened all parties to the opprobrium of their respective people.New York Times, 7 Jan. 2022 See More
Word History
Etymology
borrowed from Latin, derivative (with -ium, deverbal suffix of function or state) of opprobrāre "to bring up as a reproach," from ob-ob- + -probrāre, verbal derivative of probrum "reproach, insult, disgrace," probably noun derivative of *pro-fro- "brought up against someone (as a reproach)," going back to Indo-European *pro-bhr-o, from *pro- "before" + *bhr-, ablaut grade of *bher- "carry, bring" — more at for entry 1, bear entry 2