Voldemort
English
Etymology
From the evil wizard Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter series by J. K. Rowling, whose name in turn is a compound derived from French vol de mort (“flight/theft of death”).
Noun
Voldemort (plural Voldemorts)
- An evil, harmful, or widely feared person or thing.
- 2013, Robert H. Lustig; Heather Millar; & Cindy Gershen, The Fat Chance Cookbook: More Than 100 Recipes Ready in Under 30 Minutes to Help You Lose the Sugar and the Weight, Hudson Street Press, published 2013, →ISBN:
- Fructose is the Voldemort of the metabolic syndrome pandemic: stealthy, ever-present, and bad for the common good.
- For more quotations using this term, see Citations:Voldemort.
Derived terms
Verb
Voldemort (third-person singular simple present Voldemorts, present participle Voldemorting, simple past and past participle Voldemorted)
- (transitive) To avoid naming someone or something directly; to use circumlocution.
- 2018 August, Emily van der Nagel, “‘Networks that work too well’: intervening in algorithmic connections”, in Media International Australia, volume 168, number 1, DOI: , ISSN 1329-878X, page 88:
- PhD candidate and attendee NatalieZed (2015a, 2015b) instead Voldemorted the hashtag by using #Deatheaters – a term for Voldemort’s supporters, also from the Harry Potter novels – to refer to Gamergate harassers: […]
- 2018, Elle Kennedy, The Chase, Elle Kennedy Inc., →ISBN:
- “We don't speak Daphne's name in this house,” Kaya explains to me. Jee-zus. One measly stomach pumping and poor Daphne gets Voldemorted? The Kappa Beta Nu chapter of Briar University is evidently a lot stricter than the Brown chapter.
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