offensive

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
18
Words With Friends
20
Letters
9
Pronunciation
/əˈfɛnsɪv/
See all 4 pronunciations
/əˈfɛnsɪv/ · /əˈfɪ̟nsɪv/ · /ˈɔˌfɛnsɪv/(US) · /ˈɑˌfɛnsɪv/

Definition of offensive

5 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. Causing offense; arousing a visceral reaction of disgust, anger, hatred, sadness, or indignation.
    “Some people find pornography offensive.”
    “An offensive smell.”
    “A survey at Yale University had 63% of students wanting professors to issue “trigger warnings” before saying anything that some might find offensive or could cause painful emotions.”
    “Britain’s police are especially zealous. Officers spend thousands of hours sifting through potentially offensive posts and arrest 30 people a day. Among those collared were a man who ranted about immigration on Facebook and a couple who criticised their daughter’s primary school.”
See all 5 definitions

adj

  1. Causing offense; arousing a visceral reaction of disgust, anger, hatred, sadness, or indignation.
    “Some people find pornography offensive.”
    “An offensive smell.”
    “A survey at Yale University had 63% of students wanting professors to issue “trigger warnings” before saying anything that some might find offensive or could cause painful emotions.”
    “Britain’s police are especially zealous. Officers spend thousands of hours sifting through potentially offensive posts and arrest 30 people a day. Among those collared were a man who ranted about immigration on Facebook and a couple who criticised their daughter’s primary school.”
  2. Relating to an offense or attack, as opposed to defensive.
    “The army's offensive capabilities. An offensive weapon.”
    “In his submission to the UN, [Christof] Heyns points to the experience of drones. Unmanned aerial vehicles were intended initially only for surveillance, and their use for offensive purposes was prohibited, yet once strategists realised their perceived advantages as a means of carrying out targeted killings, all objections were swept out of the way.”
  3. Having to do with play directed at scoring.
    “The offensive coordinator is responsible for ordering all rushing plays.”

noun

  1. (countable)An attack.
    “The Marines today launched a major offensive.”
    “In Central Hupeh, the Japanese launched another offensive from the Kingshan region, but instead of moving southwestward to cooperate with another column of theirs to capture Shasi, this column swerved to the northwest and succeeded in capturing Chunghsiang on the Han River.”
    “By the summer of 1939, a stringent military blockade had been imposed on the Shen-Kan-Ning. In the winter of 1939–1940, the Nationalists launched an offensive against the outskirts of the Border Region. Thereafter, blockhouses were erected, 200,000 KMT troops were stationed around the Shen-Kan-Ning, and all economic aid to the Communists was suspended.”
    “Israel has launched a major aerial and ground offensive into the occupied West Bank city of Jenin, its biggest military operation in the Palestinian territory in years, in what it described as an “extensive counter-terrorism effort”.”
  2. (uncountable)The posture of attacking or being able to attack.
    “He took the offensive in the press, accusing his opponent of corruption.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle French offensif, from offendre + -if by analogy with défensif. Offendre is from Latin offendere (“to offend”); see offend.

Words you can make from offensive

124 playable · top: VIFFS (14 pts)

Best play viffs 14 points

7-letter words

1 word

6-letter words

7 words

5-letter words

24 words

4-letter words

41 words

3-letter words

34 words

2-letter words

16 words

Hooks

1 extension · 1 back

A single letter you can add to offensive to make another valid word.

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