Invective vs Infamy - What's the difference?
invective | infamy | Related terms |
An expression which inveighs or rails against a person.
A severe or violent censure or reproach.
Something spoken or written, intended to cast opprobrium, censure, or reproach on another.
*'>citation
A harsh or reproachful accusation.
Characterized by invection or railing.
The state of being infamous.
A reputation as being evil.
Invective is a related term of infamy.
As a verb invective
is .As a noun infamy is
the state of being infamous.invective
English
Noun
(en noun)- Politics can raise invective to a low art.
Adjective
(en adjective)- Tom's speeches became diatribes — each more invective than the last.
Synonyms
* (characterized by invection or railing) abusive, critical, denunciatory, satirical, vitriolic, vituperative (Webster 1913) ----infamy
English
Noun
(infamies)- "Infamy', '''infamy - they've all got it in for me!" - Kenneth Williams as Julius Caesar in ''Carry On Cleo
- "A date which will live in infamy " - Franklin D. Roosevelt in response to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbour
