CORRUPT


Meaning of CORRUPT in English

I. kəˈrəpt verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

Etymology: Middle English corrupten, from Latin corruptus, past participle of corrumpere, from com- + rumpere to break — more at reave

transitive verb

1.

a. : to change from good to bad in morals, manners, or actions : make base : pervert

there is an opposite error … and that is the belief that children are naturally virtuous, and are only corrupted by … their elders' vices — Bertrand Russell

b. : bribe

large corporations made an unsuccessful effort to corrupt federal auditors

c. : to degrade with unsound principles or moral values

enslave America with machines … and corrupt it with materialism — Brooks Atkinson

: weaken , pervert

such behavior corrupts party discipline

: spoil , ruin

that fevered imagination which corrupted everything that touched me — W.H.Hudson

2. : to spoil or make putrid by decomposition or rotting : taint or infect with infectious or putrefying matter

a city corrupted with the plague

3. : to subject (a person) to corruption of blood

4.

a. : to change (a language) in such a way that standard forms become different from earlier forms regarded as better or purer — not used technically

b. : to change (as a word) often by substitution of the familiar for the unfamiliar or by adaptation to the sound system of a language

Dutch koolsla was corrupted to English coldslaw

— not used technically

5. : to alter from the original or correct form or version (as by error, omission, or addition)

the text was corrupted by careless copyists

intransitive verb

1.

a. : to become tainted, rotten, or putrid

leaving the bodies to corrupt on the field

b. : to become morally debased, perverted from right principles, weakened, or unsound

power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely — J.E.E.Dalberg-Acton

2. : to cause disintegration, spoiling, or ruin

lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust doth corrupt — Mt 6:19 (Authorized Version)

Synonyms: see debase

II. adjective

( sometimes -er/-est )

Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French or Latin; Middle French, from Latin corruptus

1.

a. : depraved , evil : perverted into a state of moral weakness or wickedness

humanity they knew to be corrupt and incompetent from the day of Adam's creation — Henry Adams

b. : of debased political morality : characterized by bribery, the selling of political favors, or other improper political or legal transactions or arrangements

corrupt judges

corrupt and incompetent city government

2. archaic : tainted by decomposition or rotting : putrid

3.

a. : adulterated or debased by change from an original condition of purity or excellence : debased or contaminated by the addition of undesirable elements

forsook classic … plays for … melodramas that culminated in the corrupt … imitations known as thrillers and tearjerkers — American Guide Series: New Jersey

specifically : altered from the original or correct condition (as by error)

many of the original Scarlatti … notations have been deleted … by editors … simply because they were copying an edition already corrupt — D.D.Boyden

b. of a language : changed from an earlier form regarded as better or purer — not used technically

c. of a word or other linguistic form : characterized by having undergone linguistic change — not used technically

4. : affected by corruption of blood

Synonyms: see vicious

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