Search this site:

Definition of offend


Reference


Word of the Day
exculpate
Definition: (verb) to free from blame or guilt.
Petersons.com
Add Word of the Day to your personalized My Yahoo! page:
Add to My Yahoo! View RSS Feed
About My Yahoo! and RSS »

 

of·fend  audio  (-fnd) KEY  

VERB:
of·fend·ed , of·fend·ing , of·fends
VERB:
tr.
  1. To cause displeasure, anger, resentment, or wounded feelings in.
  2. To be displeasing or disagreeable to: Onions offend my sense of smell.
    1. To transgress; violate: offend all laws of humanity.
    2. To cause to sin.
VERB:
intr.
  1. To result in displeasure: Bad manners may offend.
    1. To violate a moral or divine law; sin.
    2. To violate a rule or law: offended against the curfew.

ETYMOLOGY:
Middle English offenden, from Old French offendre, from Latin offendere; see gwhen- in Indo-European roots

SYNONYMS:
offend , insult , affront , outrage

These verbs mean to cause resentment, humiliation, or hurt. To offend is to cause displeasure, wounded feelings, or repugnance in another: "He often offended men who might have been useful friends" (John Lothrop Motley). Insult implies gross insensitivity, insolence, or contemptuous rudeness: "I . . . refused to stay any longer in the room with him, because he had insulted me" (Anthony Trollope). To affront is to insult openly, usually intentionally: "He continued to belabor the poor woman in a studied effort to affront his hated chieftain" (Edgar Rice Burroughs). Outrage implies the flagrant violation of a person's integrity, pride, or sense of right and decency: "Agnes . . . was outraged by what seemed to her Rose's callousness" (Mrs. Humphry Ward).


Visit our partner's site
Provided by Houghton Mifflin
logoeReference -- Download this interactive reference software to your desktop computer


Search Dictionary:

 More on Yahoo! Education
 • Online and On-Campus Degree Programs
    MBAs  -  Technology Management  -  Education  -  Health  -  More

 • College & Grad School - A Comprehensive Guide
    College Search  -  Test Prep  -  Application Tips  -  Scholarship Search
 

The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition.
Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by the Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Other Important Information
-