SCOURGE


Meaning of SCOURGE in English

I. ˈskərj, ˈskə̄j, ˈskəij sometimes ˈskō(ə)rj or ˈskȯ(ə)rj or -ōəj or -ȯ(ə)j noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English, from Anglo-French escorge, from (assumed) Old French escorgier to whip, drive out with a whip (whence Old French escorgiée whip), from Old French es- ex- (from Latin ex- ) + Latin corrigia shoelace, strap, whip — more at corrigiola

1. : whip ; especially : a whip that is used to inflict pain or punishment

2.

a. : one that is an instrument of punishment or severe criticism

can safely ignore it and talk as if he had always been the scourge of reaction — R.H.Rovere

b. : a cause of widespread or great affliction: as

(1) : a person who brings misery

made himself the special scourge of the region — C.L.Jones

(2) : a wasting disease that affects a large area

smallpox finally ceased to be a scourge — American Guide Series: Massachusetts

(3) : a large destructive swarm

a scourge of grasshoppers descended and devoured every sprig of vegetation — American Guide Series: Texas

(4) : a social evil

the scourge of recurrent unemployment — Archibald MacLeish

II. transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English scourgen, from scourge (I)

1. : to whip severely : lash , flog

2.

a. : to punish severely

God had not yet sufficiently scourged the city — Daniel Defoe

b. : to subject to a great affliction : devastate

barbarians scourged the land and destroyed all civilization

dust storms scourged the prairie states — Newsweek

c. : to force into a position as if by the blows of a whip

television … is going to scourge the phonies out of politics — Stuart Chase

d. : to subject to severe criticism or satire

scourges the schools for their low standards

3. Scotland : to cause (as soil) to become exhausted

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.