Definition of the Slang Word Savage

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This shows grade level based on the word's complexity.


adjective

fierce, ferocious, or cruel; untamed: savage beasts.

Offensive. (in historical use) relating to or being a preliterate people or society regarded as uncivilized or primitive: savage tribes.

enraged or furiously angry, as a person.

unpolished; rude: savage manners.

wild or rugged, as country or scenery: savage wilderness.

Archaic. uncultivated; growing wild.

noun

a fierce, brutal, or cruel person.

a rude, boorish person.

Offensive. (in historical use) a member of a preliterate people or society regarded as uncivilized or primitive.

verb (used with object), sav·aged, sav·ag·ing.

to assault and maul by biting, rending, goring, etc.; tear at or mutilate: numerous sheep savaged by dogs.

to attack or criticize thoroughly or remorselessly; excoriate: a play savaged by the critics.

to greatly weaken, damage, or harm: The age of automation and globalization, with companies searching for lower wages overseas, has savaged organized labor.

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Origin of savage

First recorded in 1250–1300; Middle English adjective savage, saveage, sauvage, salvage, from Old French sauvage, salvage, savage, Anglo-French sawage, from Medieval Latin salvāticus, for Latin silvāticus, equivalent to silv(a) "woods" + -āticus adjective suffix; noun derivative of the adjective

synonym study for savage

historical usage of savage

English savage is also spelled saveage, sauvage, salvage in Middle English. Middle English also has the spellings Sawage and Suvage for surnames. The Middle English forms come from Old French sauvage, salvage, savage and Anglo-French sawage. The Old French and Anglo-French forms come from Medieval Latin salvāticus, a modification of Latin silvāticus "pertaining to forests or scrubland," a derivative of the noun silva "woodlands, forest."
The (now offensive) noun sense "a member of a preliterate people regarded as uncivilized" dates from the second half of the 16th century. The senses "cruel, brutal person" and "rude, uncouth person" both date from the early 17th century.

OTHER WORDS FROM savage

sav·age·ly, adverb sav·age·ness, noun half-sav·age, adjective half-sav·age·ly, adverb

pre·sav·age, adjective qua·si-sav·age, adjective qua·si-sav·age·ly, adverb sem·i·sav·age, adjective un·sav·age, adjective un·sav·age·ly, adverb un·sav·age·ness, noun

Words nearby savage

sauve qui peut, Sauvignon, Sauvignon Blanc, sav, Sava, savage, Savage Island, savagery, Savage's Station, savagism, Savaii

Other definitions for savage (2 of 2)


noun

Michael Joseph, 1872–1940, New Zealand statesman and labor leader: prime minister 1935–40.

Richard, 1697?–1743, English poet.

Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2021

How to use savage in a sentence

  • There's a whole community out there rushing to find documents, disks, and hard drives from the '80s and '90s before they're savaged by time and bit rot.

  • A great country cannot allow people to come in and savage it, have no consequences, and then wait for the next attack.

  • I asked Savage to listen to "Sho Z-Pod Dupa" by DakhaBrakha to see where it fell on his universal scale.

  • On this level, Mankiewicz's film is a masterwork of subversion, a precursor to films that savaged the American love affair with normalcy—"The Graduate," "Blue Velvet," "American Beauty," and "Fight Club" among them.

  • Stephanopoulos is a TV newsman, and Savage is a sex columnist.

  • Bolstered by the momentum of Savage, Masters continued to accumulate up-and-coming conservative talent.

  • After two years, the dispute ended with an arbitration ruling in favor of Savage.

  • In a 2009 profile of the right-wing firebrand, The New Yorker called Savage "a heretic among heretics."

  • In the midst of the Michael Savage drama, the Talk Radio Network empire entered into another major lawsuit.

  • Savage noted that "HIV/AIDS forced us to start talking about what people are doing in bed."

  • Under so many savage blows, the labouring mountains brought forth Turks.

  • It makes out of the savage raw material which is our basal mental stuff, a citizen.

  • Yet a child coming under the humanising influences of culture soon gets far away from the level of the savage.

  • A primitive savage makes a bow and arrow in a day: it takes him a fortnight to make a bark canoe.

  • Savage troopers urged their horses into the water and slashed cowering women with their sabers.

British Dictionary definitions for savage (1 of 2)


adjective

wild; untamed savage beasts of the jungle

ferocious in temper; vicious a savage dog

uncivilized; crude savage behaviour

(of peoples) nonliterate or primitive a savage tribe

(of terrain) rugged and uncultivated

obsolete far from human habitation

noun

a member of a nonliterate society, esp one regarded as primitive

a crude or uncivilized person

a fierce or vicious person or animal

verb (tr)

to criticize violently

to attack ferociously and wound the dog savaged the child

Derived forms of savage

savagedom, noun savagely, adverb savageness, noun

Word Origin for savage

C13: from Old French sauvage, from Latin silvāticus belonging to a wood, from silva a wood

British Dictionary definitions for savage (2 of 2)


noun

Michael Joseph. 1872-1940, New Zealand statesman; prime minister of New Zealand (1935-40)

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Definition of the Slang Word Savage

Source: https://www.dictionary.com/browse/savage

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