chastise

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
13
Words With Friends
13
Letters
8
Pronunciation
/tʃæˈstaɪz/(UK)
See all 3 pronunciations
/tʃæˈstaɪz/(UK) · /ˈt͡ʃæstaɪz/ · /t͡ʃæˈstaɪz/

Definition of chastise

2 senses · 1 part of speech · etymology included

verb

  1. (transitive)To punish, especially by corporal punishment.
    “And now whereas my father did lade you with a heauy yoke, I wil adde to your yoke: my father hath chastised you with whippes, but I will chastise you with scorpions.”
    “An army was sent to chastise an unoffending people; to subdue an imaginary insurrection.”
    “Thus only the husband is in a position to chastise her, for his own relatives may not exert any physical force over her.”
    “If even Israel, the people chosen to be God’s own, scorned and neglected the values God had revealed to be what God willed and desired, then God would marshal the forces of history to chastise them.”
    ““There is a man who must be chastised,” she says softly, lightly. “Chastised in a physical way. It should not be difficult. Not for you.””
See all 2 definitions

verb

  1. (transitive)To punish, especially by corporal punishment.
    “And now whereas my father did lade you with a heauy yoke, I wil adde to your yoke: my father hath chastised you with whippes, but I will chastise you with scorpions.”
    “An army was sent to chastise an unoffending people; to subdue an imaginary insurrection.”
    “Thus only the husband is in a position to chastise her, for his own relatives may not exert any physical force over her.”
    “If even Israel, the people chosen to be God’s own, scorned and neglected the values God had revealed to be what God willed and desired, then God would marshal the forces of history to chastise them.”
    ““There is a man who must be chastised,” she says softly, lightly. “Chastised in a physical way. It should not be difficult. Not for you.””
  2. (transitive)To castigate; to scold or censure.
    “She feels definitely that Lung Shing is her town, and is not hesitant to chastise people who she thinks are not behaving properly—such as, for example, a woman using loud, vulgar language on the street—although in so doing she may only turn the direction of abuse on herself.”
    “Only last year Attorney General Edwin Meese chastised the Supreme Court for a series of decisions based on the legal doctrine of “indoctrination”—that is, that the 14th Amendment requires the states to respect the prohibitions on abuse of power that the Bill of Rights had originally applied to the federal government.”
    “My urban, academic friends chastise me for romanticizing rural life.”
    “People pop up all the time to boast of their domestic arrangements or chastise others for what they eat or how they get around.”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English chastisen, from Old French chastier, from Latin castīgō. See also the doublets chasten and castigate and cf. also chaste.

Words you can make from chastise

200+ playable · top: ACHIEST (12 pts)

Best play achiest 12 points

7-letter words

8 words

6-letter words

25 words

5-letter words

57 words

4-letter words

79 words

3-letter words

30 words

Hooks

3 extensions · 3 back

A single letter you can add to chastise to make another valid word.

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