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; damn : c.1280, "to condemn," from O.Fr. damner,derivative of L. noun damnare, from damnum "damage, loss, hurt." Latin word evolved a legal meaning of "pronounce judgment upon." Theological sense is first recorded c.1325; the optative expletive use likely is as old. To be not worth a damn is from 1817. Damn Yankee, characteristic Southern U.S. term for "Northerner," is attested from 1812. = damn =

v., damned, damn·ing, damns. v.tr. # To pronounce an adverse judgment upon.

# To bring about the failure of; ruin. # To condemn as harmful, illegal, or immoral: a cleric who damned gambling and strong drink. # To condemn to everlasting punishment or a similar fate; doom. # To swear at. v.intr. To swear; curse. interj. Used to express anger, irritation, contempt, or disappointment. n. # The saying of "damn" as a curse. # Informal. The least valuable bit; a jot: not worth a damn. adv. & adj. Damned. idiom:

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16y ago

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