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stigma

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

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See also: Stigma

English

Etymology 1

    From Latin stigma, from Ancient Greek στίγμα (stígma, mark of slavery or disgrace), from στίζω (stízō, to mark). Closely related to stigme, and distantly related to stick.

    Alternative forms

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈstɪɡmə/
    • Audio (Southern England):(file)
    • Rhymes: -ɪɡmə

    Noun

    stigma (plural stigmata or stigmas)

    1. An indication of infamy or disgrace.
      • 2023 September 8, David Donachie, A Shred of Honour: A Markham of the Marines Novel, Rowman & Littlefield, →ISBN, page 2:
        But to have as an enforced dining companion a man who was probably a Papist, certainly a rake, and bore the stigma of cowardice, was anathema.
      1. (historical) A permanent identity mark branded, cut or tattooed onto the skin, typically given to slaves, criminals and traitors.
      2. (figurative) A negative and often unfair attitude (held by a group or society, to something). [1980s?]
        • 1982, Journal of Gerontological Nursing:
          Yet, because of the stigma around nursing home placement, it is hard to find advocates from among the natural advocacy groups the families. You don't see families organized around long-term care as you do around specific diseases.
        • 2010 March 18, Dora Kohen, Oxford Textbook of Women and Mental Health, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 5:
          Hence, the stigma attached to mental disorders in general forms the basis of the stigma towards women with mental health problems. []
        • 2018 March 8, Darko Pozder, Without Stigma: About the Stigma of the Mental Illness, Xlibris Corporation, →ISBN:
          Coming into contact with the person affected by mental illness can help reduce the stigma that the public has towards the illness.
        • 2024 December 15, Amy Speier, Mobility in North American Surrogacy: A Fertile Global Industry, Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, →ISBN, page 67:
          ... the stigma in the United States about the lower class accessing “welfare,”  []
      3. (Christianity, chiefly in the plural stigmata) A mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ, and sometimes reported to bleed periodically.
      4. (figurative, poetic, rare) An expression or behaviour revealing one's hidden feelings.
        • 1938, Norman Lindsay, Age of Consent, 1st Australian edition, Sydney, N.S.W.: Ure Smith, published 1962, →OCLC, page 65:
          Bradly scowled - the stigmata of alarm. What ultimate threat to his peace and privacy did this dropping in by young Podson imply?
    2. A scar or birthmark.
    3. (botany) The sticky part of a flower that receives pollen during pollination.
      Synonym: (obsolete) summit
      • 1905, Maude Gridley Peterson, How to Know Wild Fruits: A Guide to Plants When Not in Flower by Means of Fruit and Leaf, Macmillan, page 202:
        Black crowberry. Empetrum nigrum. Crowberry Family. Fruit. — The black drupe is berrylike, globular, and incloses six to nine seedlike nutlets with a seed in each. The calyx is at the base and the stigma is at the apex. The drupes are solitary in the leaf axils. They are juicy, acid, edible, and serve as food for the Arctic birds.
      • 1982, Dennis Linde, “Reproduction”, in Grease 2:
        Now you see just how the stamen gets its lusty dust onto the stigma / And why this frenzied chlorophyllous orgy starts in spring is no enigma!
    4. (medicine) A visible sign or characteristic of a disease.
    5. (zoology) Synonym of pterostigma.
    Derived terms
    Translations
    See also

    Etymology 2

    From Byzantine Greek στίγμα (stígma), likely coined by analogy with σίγμα (sígma).

    Noun

    stigma (plural stigmas)

    1. (typography) A ligature of the Greek letters sigma and tau: Ϛ / ϛ.
    Translations

    Further reading

    Anagrams

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    Czech

    Etymology

    Borrowed from Latin stigma, from Ancient Greek στίγμα (stígma, mark of slavery or disgrace).

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): [ˈstɪɡma]
    • Hyphenation: stig‧ma

    Noun

    stigma n

    1. stigma (an indication of infamy or disgrace)

    Declension

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    Danish

    Etymology

    From Latin stigma, from Ancient Greek στίγμα (stígma, mark of slavery or disgrace).

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /stiːma/, [ˈsd̥iːma] or IPA(key): /stikma/, [ˈsd̥iɡ̊ma]

    Noun

    stigma n (singular definite stigmaet, plural indefinite stigmata)

    1. stigma (an indication of infamy or disgrace)

    Inflection

    More information neuter gender, singular ...

    Further reading

    Dutch

    Pronunciation

    Etymology 1

    From Latin stigma, from Ancient Greek στίγμα (stígma, mark of slavery or disgrace).

    Noun

    stigma n (plural stigma's or stigmata, diminutive stigmaatje n)

    1. stigma (an indication of infamy or disgrace)
    2. (Christianity) stigma (mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ)
    Derived terms

    Etymology 2

    From Byzantine Greek στίγμα (stígma), likely coined by analogy with σίγμα (sígma).

    Noun

    stigma n (plural stigma's or stigmata, diminutive stigmaatje n)

    1. (typography) stigma (a ligature of the Greek letters sigma and tau: Ϛ / ϛ)

    Further reading

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    Finnish

    Etymology

    Internationalism (see English stigma), ultimately from Latin stigma, from Ancient Greek στίγμα (stígma).

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈstiɡmɑ/, [ˈs̠tiɡmɑ̝]
    • Rhymes: -iɡmɑ
    • Syllabification(key): stig‧ma
    • Hyphenation(key): stig‧ma

    Noun

    stigma

    1. stigma (an indication of infamy or disgrace)

    Declension

    More information nominative, genitive ...
    More information first-person singular possessor, singular ...

    Further reading

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    French

    French Wikipedia has an article on:
    Wikipedia fr

    Etymology

    From Byzantine Greek στίγμα (stígma), likely coined by analogy with σίγμα (sígma).

    Pronunciation

    Noun

    stigma m (plural stigmas)

    1. (typography) stigma (a ligature of the Greek letters sigma and tau: Ϛ / ϛ)
      Contrairement à ce que l'œil pourrait laisser croire, stigma n'est pas un sigma final grec : en effet, c'est l'évolution de la ligature d'un sigma lunaire avec un tau.
      Contrary to how the eye might lead you to believe, stigma isn't a Greek terminal sigma: in effect, it's the evolution of the ligature of a lunate sigma with a tau.
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    Italian

    Pronunciation

    • IPA(key): /ˈstiɡ.ma/
    • Rhymes: -iɡma
    • Hyphenation: stìg‧ma

    Etymology 1

    From Latin stigma, from Ancient Greek στίγμα (stígma, mark of slavery or disgrace).

    Noun

    stigma m (plural stigmi)

    1. stigma (an indication of infamy or disgrace)
    2. (Christianity) stigma (mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ)

    Etymology 2

    From Byzantine Greek στίγμα (stígma), likely coined by analogy with σίγμα (sígma).

    Noun

    stigma m or f (invariable)

    1. (typography) stigma (a ligature of the Greek letters sigma and tau: Ϛ / ϛ)

    Further reading

    • stigma1 in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
    • stigma2 in Treccani.it – Vocabolario Treccani on line, Istituto dell'Enciclopedia Italiana
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    Latin

    Pronunciation

    Etymology 1

      From Ancient Greek στῐ́γμᾰ (stĭ́gmă).

      Noun

      stigma n (genitive stigmatis); third declension

      1. (historical) stigma (a permanent identity mark branded, cut or tattooed onto the skin, typically given to slaves, criminals and traitors)
      Declension

      Third-declension noun (neuter, imparisyllabic non-i-stem).

      Derived terms
      • stigmatiās
      • stigmatizō
      Descendants

      Etymology 2

      (This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)

      Noun

      stigma n (genitive stigmatis); third declension

      1. medieval spelling of stemma
      Declension

      Third-declension noun (neuter, imparisyllabic non-i-stem).

      References

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      Swedish

      Swedish Wikipedia has an article on:
      Wikipedia sv

      Etymology

      From Latin stigma, from Ancient Greek στίγμα (stígma, mark of slavery or disgrace).

      Noun

      stigma n

      1. stigma (an indication of infamy or disgrace)
        att ha många barn har gått från stigma till status
        to have many children has gone from stigma to status

      Declension

      More information nominative, genitive ...

      Noun

      stigma n

      1. (Christianity, chiefly in the plural stigmata) stigma (mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ)

      Declension

      More information nominative, genitive ...

      References

      Welsh

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