maledicta
English
Etymology
From Latin maledicta, plural of maledictum (“curse, insult”).
Noun
maledicta pl (plural only)
- Profane language of all kinds.
- 2007, Steven Pinker, The Stuff of Thought: Language as a Window Into Human Nature, page 340:
- We see this in the third commandment, in the popularity of hell, damn, God, and Jesus Christ, and in many of the terms for taboo language itself: profanity (that which is not sacred), blasphemy (literally "evil speech" but in practice disrespect toward a deity), and swearing, cursing, and oaths, which were originally secured by the invocation of a deity or one of his symbols, like the tabernacle, chalice, and wafer incongruously found in Catholic maledicta.
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Latin
Noun
maledicta
- nominative plural of maledictum
- accusative plural of maledictum
- vocative plural of maledictum
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