reputation

noun
/ˌɹɛpjʊˈteɪʃən/

Etymology

14c. "credit, good reputation", from Middle English reputacion, reputacioun, reputation, reputatioun, from Anglo-Norman reputacion, reputacioun, Middle French reputation (French réputation), and their etymon Latin reputātiōnem (“consideration, thinking over”), noun of action from past participle stem of reputō (“reflect upon, reckon, count over”), from the prefix re- (“again”) + putō (“reckon, consider”). By surface analysis, repute + -ation. Displaced native Old English hlīsa (“reputation, fame”)

  1. derived from reputātiō
  2. derived from reputation

Definitions

  1. What somebody or something is known for.

    • The new manager has a reputation for being a stickler for details.
    • And Balaam (or as the trueth of the hebrewe hath Bileam) doth signifie the people of no reputation or the vayne people or they that are not counted for people.
    • Sometimes a man makes a reputation, deserved or otherwise, by a single action.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for reputation. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

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