spurn

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
7
Words With Friends
10
Letters
5
Pronunciation
/spɜːn/(UK)
See all 2 pronunciations
/spɜːn/(UK) · /spɝn/(US)

Definition of spurn

8 senses · 2 parts of speech · etymology included

verb

  1. (ambitransitive)To reject disdainfully; contemn; scorn.
    “to spurn at your most royal image”
    “What safe and nicely I might well delay By rule of knighthood, I disdain and spurn.”
    “Domestics will pay a more ready and cheerful service, when they find themselves not spurned, because fortune has laid them below the level of others, at their master's feet.”
    “She will spurn a Tyrone Power/A Van Johnson or a Gable/For a Cenek Kottnauer/Or a man like Dr. Treybal”
    “Although the term “rewilding” – meaning an approach to conservation that allows nature a free rein – has been in currency since 1990, many traditional landowners and gamekeepers continue to spurn both the term and the idea behind it.”
See all 8 definitions

verb

  1. (ambitransitive)To reject disdainfully; contemn; scorn.
    “to spurn at your most royal image”
    “What safe and nicely I might well delay By rule of knighthood, I disdain and spurn.”
    “Domestics will pay a more ready and cheerful service, when they find themselves not spurned, because fortune has laid them below the level of others, at their master's feet.”
    “She will spurn a Tyrone Power/A Van Johnson or a Gable/For a Cenek Kottnauer/Or a man like Dr. Treybal”
    “Although the term “rewilding” – meaning an approach to conservation that allows nature a free rein – has been in currency since 1990, many traditional landowners and gamekeepers continue to spurn both the term and the idea behind it.”
  2. (transitive)To reject something by pushing it away with the foot.
    “Me thinks I ſee kings kneeling at his feet, And he with frowning browes and fiery lookes, Spurning their crownes from off their captiue heads.”
    “I spurn thee like a cur out of my way.”
  3. (transitive)To waste; fail to make the most of (an opportunity)
    “Marouane Chamakh then spurned a great chance to kill the game off when he ran onto Andrey Arshavin's lofted through ball but shanked his shot horribly across the face of goal.”
  4. (intransitive, obsolete)To kick or toss up the heels.
    “oft' the ſudden Gale Ruffles the Tide, and ſhifts the dang'rous Sail, […] The drunken Chairman in the Kennel ſpurns, The Glaſſes ſhatters, and his Charge o'erturns.”

noun

  1. An act of spurning; a scornful rejection.
  2. (archaic)A kick; a blow with the foot.
    “What defence can properly be used in such a despicable encounter as this but either the slap or the spurn?”
  3. (obsolete)Disdainful rejection; contemptuous treatment.
    “The insolence of office and the spurns That patient merit of the unworthy takes.”
  4. A body of coal left to sustain an overhanging mass.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English spurnen, spornen, from Old English spurnan (“to strike against, kick, spurn, reject; stumble”), from Proto-Germanic *spurnaną (“to tread, kick, knock out”), from Proto-Indo-European *sperH-. Cognate with Scots spurn (“to strike, push, kick”), German spornen (“to spur on”), Icelandic sporna, spyrna (“to kick”), Latin spernō (“despise, distain, scorn”). Related to spur and spread.

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1 extension · 1 back

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