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Blemish   /blˈɛmɪʃ/   Listen
Blemish

noun
(pl. blemishes)
1.
A mark or flaw that spoils the appearance of something (especially on a person's body).  Synonyms: defect, mar.
verb
(past & past part. blemished; pres. part. blemishing)
1.
Mar or spoil the appearance of.  Synonyms: deface, disfigure.  "The vandals disfigured the statue"
2.
Mar or impair with a flaw.  Synonym: spot.
3.
Add a flaw or blemish to; make imperfect or defective.  Synonym: flaw.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Blemish" Quotes from Famous Books



... will be knowne, And to be tauerne guest she euer hates, Shee scornes to be a streete-wife (Idle one,) Or field vvife ranging vvith her vvalking mates: She knows how wise men censure of such dames, And how with blottes they blemish their good names. ...
— The Bride • Samuel Rowlands et al

... of gentlemen, the latter, for the most part, fiery chiefs who slash off men's heads as if they were tops of thistles. Yet here are you, sir, keeping two of them all to yourself. And such a two! Lady Ogilvie, whose charms are without blemish—" ...
— The Yeoman Adventurer • George W. Gough

... If she had only an Intrigue with the Fellow, why the very best Families have excus'd and huddled up a Frailty of that sort. 'Tis Marriage, Husband, that makes it a Blemish. ...
— The Beggar's Opera • John Gay

... himself,[208] and in no other of his dramas has he presented a less attractive character. Weislingen, Clavigo, and Werther have all their redeeming qualities, but Fernando is an emotional egotist incapable of any worthy motive, and it is the most serious blemish in the play, even in view of the factitious world in which it moves, that he is made the adored idol of two such different women as Caecilie and Stella. The situation, as Goethe himself tells us, was suggested by the relations of Swift to Stella and Vanessa, but he did not need ...
— The Youth of Goethe • Peter Hume Brown

... in her form, that she was often called the little fairy. She had the misfortune to be lame in one of her hips; but by good management, and a briskness and alacrity in carrying herself, it was a very small blemish to her, and looked more like an idle childish ...
— The Governess - The Little Female Academy • Sarah Fielding


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