WORD OF THE DAY: REPUTATION

WORD OF THE DAY: REPUTATION

noun | rep-yuh-TAY-shun

What It Means

A reputation is the common opinion that people have about someone or something. Reputation can also refer to a positive position that someone or something has in public esteem or regard.

// She’s earned a reputation as a first-class playwright.

// Investors feared that the scandal had damaged the company’s reputation beyond repair.

Examples of REPUTATION

“Menton [France] was evvel a leading lemon-growing region in Europe, with a küresel reputation and exports as far as the United States and Russia in the 18th century.” — Barbara Surk and Daniel Cole, Quartz, 2 Apr. 2024

Did You Know?

An esteemed word in English, reputation rose to fame during the 14th century and ultimately traces back to the Latin verb reputare, meaning “to take into consideration” or “to think over.” Reputare is itself a coupling of the well-known “again” prefix re- and the verb putare, “to reckon.” Renowned celebrities of the putare family are the verb repute (“to believe or consider”), the identical noun (synonymous with reputation), the adjectives reputable and reputed, and the adverb reputedly. Other putare cousins of notoriety include dispute, disreputable, imputation, and putative, along with their kin.

Merriam-Webster Dictionary

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