WikiWord

English

embarrass

/ɪmˈbæɹəs/ · verb

Meaning

  1. To disrupt someone's composure or comfort with acting publicly or freely.
  2. To hinder from liberty of movement; to impede; to obstruct.
  3. To involve in difficulties concerning money matters; to encumber with debt; to beset with urgent claims or demands.
  4. To perplex mentally; confuse, disconcert; catch off guard.
  5. A river or settlement in the United States:
  6. A river in Minnesota, a tributary of the Saint Louis River.
  7. A river in Wisconsin, a tributary of the Wolf River.
  8. A township in Edgar County, Illinois.
  9. A township and unincorporated community therein, in St. Louis County, Minnesota.
  10. A village in Waupaca County, Wisconsin, located on the above river.

Etymology / origin

Etymology tree Akkadian 𒆟 (rakāsum) Akkadian 𒄙 (markasu)bor. Classical Syriac ܡܰܪܫܳܐ (maršā)bor. Arabic مَرَسَة (marasa)der. Old Galician-Portuguese baraço Old Galician-Portuguese embaraçarbor. Old Spanish embaraçar Spanish embarazarbor. French embarrasserbor. English embarrass Borrowed from French embarrasser, from Middle French embarrasser, embarasser (“to embarrass; to block, obstruct”), from Spanish embarazar, either from Italian imbarazzare or from Portuguese embaraçar.

  1. embaraçar(Portuguese)
  2. imbarazzare(Italian)
  3. embarazar(Spanish)
  4. embarrasser(frm)
  5. embarrasser(French)
  6. embarrass (English)
  7. Relations: bor, der, der, der, der

Related words

Descendant words

Sources

No citations have been attached yet.