notorious

adj
/nə(ʊ)ˈtɔː.ɹɪ.əs/UK/nəˈtɔ.ɹi.əs/US

Etymology

From Late Middle English notoryous, from Medieval Latin nōtōrius (“evident, known; famous, well-known; infamous”), from Latin nōtus (“known, recognized; familiar, widely known; famous, well-known; infamous”) + -tōrius (suffix forming adjectives). Nōtus is the perfect passive participle of nōscō (“to become acquainted with or learn about (something); (rare) to be familiar with, recognize”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *ǵneh₃- (“to know; to recognize”). cognates * Catalan notori (“well-known”) * Middle French notoire (Anglo-Norman notoire, notoir, notore, notorie, modern French notoire (“notorious; well-known”)) * Italian notorio (“notorious; well-known”) * Portuguese notorjo (obsolete), notório (“illustrious; open, public; notorious”) * Spanish notorio (“apparent, clear, obvious; well-known”)

  1. derived from *ǵneh₃- — “to know; to recognize
  2. derived from nōtus — “known, recognized; familiar, widely known; famous, well-known; infamous
  3. derived from nōtōrius — “evident, known; famous, well-known; infamous
  4. inherited from notoryous

Definitions

  1. Senses with an unfavourable connotation.

    • Such Men theſe had, to Miſchiefe vvholly bent, / In Villanie, notorious for their skill, / Diſhoneſt, deſp'rate, mercileſſe, and rude, / That dar'd into Damnation to intrude.
    • You notorious ſtinkardly bearevvard, do's my breath ſmell?
    • But Rutilus, is ſo Notorious grovvn, / That he's the common Theme of all the Tovvn.
  2. Senses with a favourable or neutral connotation.

    • Lett him [God] notorious make, / That in good part he did thy offrings take.
    • Of Cham is the name Chemmis in Aegipt; and Ammon the Idol and Oracle ſo notorious.
  3. Synonym of notoriously.

The neighborhood

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sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA