pariah

a person who is totally rejected by a group

TRANSLATION

der Ausgestoßener, der Geächtete, der Unberührbare

STATISTICS

IN THE PRESS

"Libya: From PARIAH to participant - Libya is still recovering from seven years of UN sanctions, imposed after they intially refused to hand over the two Libyan suspects accused of the Lockerbie bombing."

(BBC News - 2 May, 2000)

Did you
know?

Did you know?
            
pariah

1. A social outcast: "Shortly Tom came upon the juvenile pariah of the village, Huckleberry Finn, son of the town drunkard" (Mark Twain).

2. An Untouchable.


Word History:

The word pariah, which can be used for anyone who is a social outcast, independent of social position, recalls a much more rigid social system, which made only certain people pariahs. The caste system of India placed pariahs, also known as Untouchables, very low in society.

The word pariah, which we have extended in meaning, came into English from Tamil paaiyar, the plural of paaiyan, the caste name, which literally means
3(hereditary) drummer2 and comes from the word paai, the name of a drum used at certain festivals.

The word is first recorded in English in 1613. Its use in English and its extension in meaning probably owe much to the long period of British rule in India.

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