Word of the Day
forswear \ for-SWAIR \ verb
1: to make a liar of (oneself) under or as if under oath
2a : to reject, deny, or renounce under oath
2b : to renounce earnestly
EXAMPLES
Tina forswore flying after the latest airline mishap left her stranded in Chicago for eighteen hours.
"… the film finds Cotillard playing an ordinary woman who, shortly after recovering from a period of depression, finds herself being laid off in unusual circumstances. If she can persuade a majority of her colleagues to forswear their annual bonuses then she can keep her job."
"… the film finds Cotillard playing an ordinary woman who, shortly after recovering from a period of depression, finds herself being laid off in unusual circumstances. If she can persuade a majority of her colleagues to forswear their annual bonuses then she can keep her job."
— Donald Clarke, The Irish Times, August 22, 2014
DID YOU KNOW?
Forswear (which is also sometimes spelled foreswear) is the modern English equivalent of the Old English forswerian.
It can suggest denial:
[Thou] would'st forswear thy own hand and seal" — John Arbuthnot, John Bull) or
[Thou] would'st forswear thy own hand and seal" — John Arbuthnot, John Bull) or
Perjury
"Is it the interest of any man … to lie, forswear himself, indulge hatred, seek desperate revenge, or do murder?" — Charles Dickens, American Notes.
"Is it the interest of any man … to lie, forswear himself, indulge hatred, seek desperate revenge, or do murder?" — Charles Dickens, American Notes.
Though in current use, it most often has to do with giving something up, as in "the warring parties agreed to forswear violence" and "she refused to forswear her principles."
The word abjure is often used as a synonym of forswear, though with less emphasis on the suggestion of perjury or betrayal of the beliefs that one holds dear.
The word abjure is often used as a synonym of forswear, though with less emphasis on the suggestion of perjury or betrayal of the beliefs that one holds dear.
No comments:
Post a Comment