Traduce

Traduce

Traduce


truh-DYOOS

Definition

(verb) To speak falsely or maliciously about someone; to misrepresent or defame

Example

The tabloid had traduced the actress so thoroughly that even her closest colleagues began to doubt her.

Word Origin

Traduce derives from the Latin traducere — from trans (“across”) + ducere (“to lead”) — meaning literally “to lead across” or “to parade before others.” In Roman usage it carried the sense of publicly displaying someone to their shame, leading them in disgrace before a crowd. It entered English in the 16th century carrying that same sense of deliberate, public humiliation through false representation.

Fun Fact

The vivid Roman image behind traduce — of parading a disgraced person through public view — was no mere metaphor in ancient practice. Roman triumphs, the great military processions celebrating conquest, frequently included captured enemies and disgraced figures led through the streets of Rome for the crowd’s contempt. To be traduced was to be made a spectacle of, stripped of dignity in front of witnesses. The word retains that public, deliberate quality even today — traduce is never accidental or private; it is always an act of calculated reputational destruction carried out in the open.

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