New to me
Immiserate: impoverish, make miserable
This verb appeared around 1956, but the noun, immiseration, came into use in the 1940s.
According to ‘The Times, ‘the chancellor immiserated business by overstressing her point about the catastrophic economic legacy left by the Tories. After that, she impoverished business, using her first budget to raise employers’ national insurance contributions (NICs) by 1.2 per cent, damaging the retail sector in particular.’
I suspect many of us are ‘immiserated’ on a daily basis, but at least we can commiserate with each other.
I am certainly made miserable often enough, but immiserated is a word I haven't heard before. Now I will :)
ReplyDeleteOne wonders where you find these words with an odd meaning. Keep it up . It's fun.
ReplyDelete