Definify.com
Webster 1913 Edition
Scapegoat
Scape′goatˊ
,Noun.
[
Scape
(for escape
) + goat
.] 1.
(Jewish Antiq.)
A goat upon whose head were symbolically placed the sins of the people, after which he was suffered to escape into the wilderness.
Lev. xvi. 10.
2.
Hence, a person or thing that is made to bear blame for others.
Tennyson.
Definition 2024
scapegoat
scapegoat
English
Noun
scapegoat (plural scapegoats)
- In the Mosaic Day of Atonement ritual, a goat symbolically imbued with the sins of the people, and sent out alive into the wilderness while another was sacrificed.
- 1646, Sir Thomas Browne, Pseudodoxia Epidemica, Book II, ch 5
- alluding herein unto the heart of man and the precious bloud of our Saviour, who was typified by the Goat that was slain, and the scape-Goat in the Wilderness
- 1646, Sir Thomas Browne, Pseudodoxia Epidemica, Book II, ch 5
- Someone punished for the error or errors of someone else.
- He is making me a scapegoat.
- 1834, Thomas Babington Macaulay, "William Pitt, Earl of Chatham"
- The new Secretary of State had been long sick of the perfidy and levity of the First Lord of the Treasury, and began to fear that he might be made a scapegoat to save the old intriguer who, imbecile as he seemed, never wanted dexterity where danger was to be avoided.
Synonyms
- (someone punished for someone else's error(s)): fall guy, patsy, whipping boy
Translations
a goat imbued with the sins of the people
|
|
someone punished for someone else's error(s)
|
|
Verb
scapegoat (third-person singular simple present scapegoats, present participle scapegoating, simple past and past participle scapegoated)
- (transitive) To punish someone for the error or errors of someone else; to make a scapegoat of.
- 1950, Rachel Davis DuBois, Neighbors in Action: A Manual for Local Leaders in Intergroup Relations, p37
- People tend to fear and then to scapegoat ... groups which seem to them to be fundamentally different from their own.
- 1975, Richard M. Harris, Adam Kendon, Mary Ritchie Key, Organization of Behavior in Face-to-face Interaction, p66
- They had been used for centuries to justify or rationalize the behavior of that status and conversely to scapegoat and blame some other category of people.
- 1992, George H.W. Bush, State of the Union Address
- And I want to add, as we make these changes, we work together to improve this system, that our intention is not scapegoating and finger-pointing.
- 2004, Yvonne M. Agazarian, Systems-Centered Therapy for Groups, p208
- Then either the world or others or the self becomes the target for the human tendency to scapegoat.
- 1950, Rachel Davis DuBois, Neighbors in Action: A Manual for Local Leaders in Intergroup Relations, p37
- (transitive) To blame something for the problems of a given society without evidence to back up the claim.
Translations
to punish someone for the error of someone else
|
to blame something for the problems of a given society
|
Related terms
- scapegoater
- scapegoating (noun)
- scapegoatism