Contumely vs Neglect - What's the difference?
contumely | neglect | Related terms |
Offensive and abusive language or behaviour; scorn, insult.
* :
* 1857 , , Volume the Second, page 19 (ISBN 1857150570)
* 1914 , (Grace Livingston Hill), The Best Man :
* 1953 , (James Strachey), translating Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation of Dreams , Avon Books, p. 178:
* 1976 , (Robert Nye), Falstaff :
(label) To fail to care for or attend to something.
* (William Shakespeare) (1564-1616)
* (John Milton) (1608-1674)
(label) To omit to notice; to forbear to treat with attention or respect; to slight.
(label) To fail to do or carry out something due to oversight or carelessness.
*{{quote-magazine, date=2014-06-14, volume=411, issue=8891, magazine=(The Economist)
, title= The act of neglecting.
The state of being neglected.
Habitual lack of care.
Contumely is a related term of neglect.
As nouns the difference between contumely and neglect
is that contumely is offensive and abusive language or behaviour; scorn, insult while neglect is the act of neglecting.As a verb neglect is
(label) to fail to care for or attend to something.contumely
English
Noun
- For who would beare the Whips and Scornes of time, The Oppressors wrong, the poore mans Contumely [...].
- She had been subjected to contumely and cross-questoning and ill-usage through the whole evening.
- What scorn, what contumely , would be his!
- If this picture of the two psychical agencies and their relation to the consciousness is accepted, there is a complete analogy in political life to the extraordinary affection which I felt in my dream for my friend R., who was treated with such contumely during the dream's interpretation.
- I could think of no words adequate to the occasion. So I belched. Not out of contumely , you understand. It was a sympathetic belch, a belch of brotherhood.
neglect
English
Verb
(en verb)- I hope / My absence doth neglect no great designs.
- This, my long suffering and my day of grace, / Those who neglect and scorn shall never taste.
It's a gas, passage=One of the hidden glories of Victorian engineering is proper drains.