2. Adjective. Subject to a stigma; marked as an outcast. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Stigmatized
1. stigmatize [v] - See also: stigmatize
Lexicographical Neighbors of Stigmatized
Literary usage of Stigmatized
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon (1843)
"... blindness of its founders, who overlooked the superior advantages of the
opposite coast, has been stigmatized by a proverbial expression of contempt. ..."
2. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (1830)
"stigmatized by the world Pen. For an accident which Cut. My case exactly. Let us
compare notée. Pen. In the eye of reason has nothing in it—— Cut. ..."
3. History of the United States of America Under the Constitution by James Schouler (1904)
"President Fillmore, in a proclamation had solemnly stigmatized all such hostile
adventures from our shores as plunder and robbery, violations of national ..."
4. History of the United States of America: Under the Constitution by James Schouler (1904)
"President Fillmore, in a proclamation had solemnly stigmatized all such hostile
adventures from our shores as plunder and robbery, violations of national ..."
5. The Revolutionary Diplomatic Correspondence of the United States by United States Dept. of State, Francis Wharton, John Bassett Moore (1889)
"Perhaps yon will see this properly stigmatized in some of our eastern papers
conveyed in the vessel which may carry this assurance of my being, ..."
6. Cyclopaedia of Political Science, Political Economy, and of the Political by John Joseph Lalor (1883)
"The story spread, and all opponents of the war, in New England and elsewhere,
were stigmatized as "blue light federalists."—See 6 Hildreth's United States, ..."
7. General History of the Christian Religion and Church by August Neander, Joseph Torrey (1849)
"inclined to put a false construction on the actions of one stigmatized as a heretic.
The only reproach that can be brought against ..."
8. General History of the Christian Religion and Church by August Neander, Joseph Torrey (1851)
"All being seized whom the popular hate had stigmatized as Christians, and therefore
profligate men,2 it might easily happen that some who were not really ..."