Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Mispraise
Mis-praise′
,Verb.
T.
To praise amiss.
Definition 2025
mispraise
mispraise
English
Verb
mispraise (third-person singular simple present mispraises, present participle mispraising, simple past and past participle mispraised)
- (transitive, rare) To praise falsely, injudiciously, or without good reason.[1]
- 1623, John Donne, The sermons of John Donne, Sermon 12 (Google preview):
- [T]hough I spend my nights, and dayes, and thoughts, and spirits, and words, and preaching, and writing, upon Princes, and Judges, and Magistrates . . . I have not paid a farthing of my debt to God; I have not praised him, but I have praised them, till not only my selfe, but even they, whom I have so mispraised, are the worse in the sight of God, for my over-praising.
- 1845, Morgan Rattler, "Touching Antony the Triumvir and Cicero the Orator," Fraser's Magazine (September), p. 326 (Google preview):
- We look upon it not so much as a strangely overpraised, but as a mispraised composition. It is a torrent of abuse.
- 2010, Paul F. O'Rourke (quoting Jonathan Barnes), Offerings to the Discerning Eye, Sue D'Auria (ed.), ISBN 9789004178748, p. 247 n.25 (Google preview):
- Anaximander's interest in cosmogony has been vastly overestimated, and his achievements consistently mispraised.
- 1623, John Donne, The sermons of John Donne, Sermon 12 (Google preview):
- (transitive, archaic) To slander, blame, or disparage.[2]
- 1949, Lionel Trilling, Matthew Arnold, ISBN 9780049280182, p. 106 (Google preview):
- On hearing the Duke of Wellington mispraised he defends him, in a sonnet.
- 1949, Lionel Trilling, Matthew Arnold, ISBN 9780049280182, p. 106 (Google preview):