Skip to content

The word for today is…

lambaste (verb):

1: to assault violently : beat, whip
2: to attack verbally : censure

Source : Merriam -Webster

Etymology : The origins of lambaste (which can also be spelled lambast) are somewhat uncertain, but the word was most likely formed by combining the verbs lam and baste, both of which mean “to beat severely.” (This baste is unrelated to either the sewing or cooking one.) Although lambaste started out in the 1600s meaning “to assault violently,” English speakers were by the 1800s applying it in cases involving harsh attacks made with words rather than fists. This new sense clearly struck a chord; after fighting its way into the lexicon, lambaste has held fast ever since.

If you enjoyed this BFD word of the day please consider sharing it with your friends and, especially, your children.

Latest

The Ministry of Don’t Ask, Won’t Tell

The Ministry of Don’t Ask, Won’t Tell

The state can either measure the relationship properly, or it can keep pretending that refusing to measure it is ‘responsible’. One of those choices builds trust. The other builds resentment. And resentment, unlike spreadsheets, does not stay missing for long.

Members Public
A Recap and Where To...

A Recap and Where To...

So, 2025 has been one hell of a rollercoaster and has seen me sit down and talk to Eli Mitchell from Common Ground. Cam Slater from Good Oil, Elliot from Hobson’s Pledge and River of Freedom documentary maker and author Gaylene Barnes amongst many others

Members Public