shame
nounEtymology
Etymology tree Proto-Germanic *skamō Proto-West Germanic *skamu Old English sċamu Middle English schame English shame From Middle English schame, from Old English sċamu, from Proto-Germanic *skamō. Cognates *German Scham (“shame”) *German Low German Schaam (“shame, shamefacedness”) *Danish, Norwegian Bokmål, Norwegian Nynorsk, Swedish skam (“shame”) *Faroese skomm (“shame, dishonour”) *Icelandic skömm (“shame”) *Gothic 𐍃𐌺𐌰𐌼𐌰 (skama, “shame”).
Definitions
An uncomfortable or painful feeling due to recognition or consciousness of one's own…
An uncomfortable or painful feeling due to recognition or consciousness of one's own impropriety or dishonor, or something being exposed that should have been kept private.
- When I realized that I had hurt my friend, I felt deep shame.
- The teenager couldn’t bear the shame of introducing his parents.
- When he had saied no: what (ſaid Ariſtippus) is it ſhame to ſaile in a Shippe, that hath afoꝛetymes caried a great nomber mo: […]
Something to regret.
- It was a shame not to see the show after driving all that way.
- Nor can thy ſhame giue phiſicke to my griefe,
- And what you do to me is a shame.
Reproach incurred or suffered
Reproach incurred or suffered; dishonour; ignominy; derision.
- […] because ye haue borne the shame of the heathen,
- Honour and shame from no condition rise.
- And every woe a tear can claim Except an erring sister's shame.
›+ 13 more definitionsshow fewer
The cause or reason of shame
The cause or reason of shame; that which brings reproach and ignominy.
- guides who are the shame of religion
That which is shameful and private, especially private parts.
- And he took fig-leaves and sewed (them) together, and made an apron for himself, and covered his shame.
- She turns to lift her robe, and lays it across her as though she were revealing her shame, as though she were naked.
- She didn't even have her handbag, because Zelda had thoughtfully left it in the kitchen along with her clothes. And nobody had even offered her so much as a T-shirt to cover her shame.
The capacity to be ashamed, inhibiting one from brazen behaviour
The capacity to be ashamed, inhibiting one from brazen behaviour; due regard for one's own moral conduct and how one is perceived by others; restraint, moderation, decency.
- Don't you have any shame?
A cry of admonition for the subject of a speech, either to denounce the speaker or to…
A cry of admonition for the subject of a speech, either to denounce the speaker or to agree with the speaker's denunciation of some person or matter; often used reduplicated, especially in political debates.
Ellipsis of what a shame
Ellipsis of what a shame; expressing disappointment or sympathy
- Shame, you poor thing, you must be cold!
Embarrassed and shy, particularly because one is the subject of attention.
- She says that she doesn't touch them, this is important, sometimes maybe a handshake may make them more shame, that is shy or embarrassed.
- Int.[:] What types of things have you learnt about at AIME, like about yourselves or about others? Deon[:] To be confident. Greg[:] Yeah be confident. And not be shame…
- Aunty Gracelyn is most famous for her role in developing 'Condoman', the Indigenous superhero whose catchcry and public health message 'don’t be shame be game, use condoms!' became a defining figure of Australia's HIV and AIDS crisis.
Causing embarrassment or shyness.
- "A lot of the time when we want to do stuff we'll be like, 'Oh no, that's shame — I don't want to do that because I'll be on my own'," Headland told NIT.
To cause to feel shame.
- I was shamed by the teacher's public disapproval.
- Were there but one righteous in the world, he would[…]shame the world, and not the world him.
To cover with reproach or ignominy
To cover with reproach or ignominy; to dishonor; to disgrace.
- And with fowle cowardize his carcas ſhame,
To denounce as having done something shameful
To denounce as having done something shameful; to criticize with the intent or effect of causing a feeling of shame.
- Stop shaming others about their food choices.
- It is disgraceful that you should be used by adults for the purpose of trying to shame us because our extraction of timber from our forests.
To drive or compel by shame.
- The politician was shamed into resigning.
To feel shame, be ashamed.
- I do ſhame to thinke of what a noble ſtraine you are, and of how coward a ſpirit.
To mock at
To mock at; to deride.
- Ye have shamed the counsel of the poor, because the Lord is his refuge.
The neighborhood
- synonymalso: Thesaurus:shame
- synonymabasement
- synonymdisgrace
- synonymdishonour
- synonymembarrassment
- synonymhurt
- synonymignominy
- synonymobloquy
- synonymopprobrium
- synonymshame
- synonymunhonour
- antonymhonorantonym(s) of “uncomfortable or painful feeling”
- antonymexaltation
- antonymdignifyantonym(s) of “to cause to feel shame”
- neighbordisrepute
- neighborembarrassed
- neighborabash
Derived
15 minutes of shame, ain't no shame in my game, antishame, badge of shame, cone of shame, cover-shame, crying shame, for shame, for shame's sake, hall of shame, no shame in my game, put to shame, shame be to him who thinks evil of it, shame-casting, shamefaced, shamefast, shameful, shamefully, shame job, shameless, shamelessly, shamelike, shame on you, shame plant, shame pole, shameproof, shame reel, shamesome, shame-stroke, shame to him who thinks ill of it, shame upon you, shame weed, shameworthy, Spanish shame, that's a shame, there's no shame in my game, walk of shame, wall of shame, what a shame, body-shame · +18 more
Vish — recursive loop
A definitional loop anchored at shame. Each word in the ring is defined by the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself. Scroll to it and watch.
A definitional loop anchored at shame. Each word in the ring appears in the definition of the next; follow the chain far enough and it folds back on itself.
8 hops · closes at shame
curated · pre-corpus. live cycle detection across the full graph is the next major milestone.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA