Slander

/ˈslændər/ noun

The act of saying false and harmful things about someone in order to damage their reputation. It usually refers to spoken, not written, lies.

“Slander” comes from Old French “esclandre,” from Late Latin “scandalum,” meaning “cause of offense” or “stumbling block.” That Latin word is also the source of “scandal.” English narrowed the meaning to false, damaging statements about a person.

📖 Full word page — etymology, 47 translations, audio 🔑 Get Free API Key — 50 lookups/day 📚 Read the Docs — integrate Word Orb