Gainsay vs Reprimand - What's the difference?
gainsay | reprimand |
To contradict; to withsay; to deny, refute; to controvert; to dispute; to forbid.
*
* 1902 , , The Hound of the Baskervilles :
* {{quote-news
, date=2012-07-07
, first=
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, author=
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, title= Griffith acted, and lived, by Golden Rule
, newspaper=The Post and Courier
, city=Charleston
, publisher=Evening Post Publishing
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A severe, formal or official reproof; reprehension, rebuke, private or public.
* Macaulay
To reprove in a formal or official way.
* 1983 . Rosen, Stanley. Plato’s Sophist: The Drama of Original & Image. South Bend, Indiana, USA: St. Augustine’s Press. p. 62.
As verbs the difference between gainsay and reprimand
is that gainsay is to contradict; to withsay; to deny, refute; to controvert; to dispute; to forbid while reprimand is to reprove in a formal or official way.As a noun reprimand is
a severe, formal or official reproof; reprehension, rebuke, private or public.gainsay
English
Verb
- Know then that in the time of the Great Rebellion (the history of which by the learned Lord Clarendon I most earnestly commend to your attention) this Manor of Baskerville was held by Hugo of that name, nor can it be gainsaid that he was a most wild, profane, and godless man.
citation, page=5, Features , passage=And there was something childlike about Griffith, too, even in his Matlock days, as a deceptively sharp 'simple country lawyer,' a big-kid boyishness that did not mask his intelligence or gainsay his authority. }}
Derived terms
* gainsayer * gainsayingreprimand
English
Noun
(en noun)- Goldsmith gave his landlady a sharp reprimand for her treatment of him.
Verb
(en verb)- He is struck by Antinous, who is in turn reprimanded by one of the “proud young men” courting Penelope:
