: to expose to public contempt, ridicule, or scorn
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In days gone by, criminals who got caught might well have found themselves in the stocks (which held the feet or both feet and hands) or a pillory. Both of those forms of punishment—and the words that name them—have been around since the Middle Ages. We latched onto pillory from the Anglo-French pilori, which has the same meaning as our English term but the exact origins of which are uncertain. For centuries, pillory referred only to the wooden frame used to hold a ne'er-do-well, but by the early 1600s, folks had turned the word into a verb for the act of putting someone in a pillory. Within a century, they had further expanded the verb to cover any process that led to as much public humiliation as being pilloried.
Examples of pillory in a Sentence
Verb
The press pilloried the judge for her decision.
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Noun
She’s forced into vacating her post, and takes to long days of binge-drinking and doom-scrolling as threatening male social media incels pillory her reputation after the details of her lawsuit against Tinder are leaked.—Ryan Lattanzio, IndieWire, 19 Sep. 2025 The 4% rule has drawn praise and pillory for years.—Daniel De Visé, USA Today, 2 Sep. 2025
Verb
That creates an uneventful race, like the one at Bristol earlier this spring, which had just four lead changes in 500 laps; afterward, fans pilloried the quality of the action on social media and satellite radio.—Jeff Gluck, New York Times, 11 Sep. 2025 Musk was pilloried by the woke crowd for making this an issue.—Steve Forbes, Forbes.com, 9 Sep. 2025 See All Example Sentences for pillory
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