Word Of The Day

  • Contumacious
    • Today's Word

    Contumacious

    Contumacious


    kon-too-MAY-shus

    Definition

    (adjective) Stubbornly and openly resistant to authority; defiant in the face of rules or commands.

    Example

    The contumacious witness refused to answer the judge’s questions despite three separate warnings, ultimately forcing the court to hold her in contempt.

    Word Origin

    Contumacious derives from the Latin contumax, meaning “insolent” or “stubborn,” rooted in contemnere — “to despise” or “to scorn.” It entered English in the 16th century primarily as a legal term, used specifically to describe a person who willfully defied a court’s authority or refused to comply with its orders — a meaning it still carries in formal legal contexts today alongside its broader use.

    Fun Fact

    In English law, the concept of contempt of court — the legal consequence most associated with contumacious behavior — dates back to the 12th century and the reign of Henry II. It was originally treated not merely as a procedural violation but as a personal affront to the monarch, since courts operated under royal authority. This is why contempt of court remains one of the few offenses where a judge can immediately imprison someone without a jury trial — it is a direct, unmediated response to defiance of authority, a legal mechanism with nearly a thousand years of contumacious defendants behind it.

Today's Popular Words

Expand Your Vocabulary Even More

Keep learning and see which words you missed this week!

Top 12 Benefits of Learning New Words

Expanding your vocabulary can offer a wide range of benefits that contribute to personal, academic, and professional growth. Learn some of the advantages.

Learn Something New Everyday!

Get the Word Of The Day sent to Your Email