iniquity
Plural: iniquities
Noun
- Gross injustice or wickedness; a morally reprehensible act.
- absence of moral or spiritual values
- morally objectionable behavior
- an unjust act
- Deviation from what is right; gross injustice, sin, wickedness.
- An act of great injustice or unfairness; a sinful or wicked act; an unconscionable deed.
Examples
- The iniquity of drawing all vowels made winning Words With Friends impossible.
Origin / Etymology
From Middle English iniquite, jniquite (“evil, wickedness, iniquity; evil act; hostility, malevolence; hostile act; a calamity, misfortune”), from Old French iniquité (modern French iniquité (“iniquity”)), from Latin inīquitās (“iniquity; inequality, unfairness; inequity, injustice”), from inīquus (“unequal, uneven, unfair; disadvantageous, unfavourable; hostile, unkind; unsuitable; wicked, wrong”) + -itās (variant of -tās (suffix forming a noun indicating a state of being)). Inīquus is derived from in- (prefix meaning ‘not’) + aequus (“equal; fair, impartial, just”). Piecewise doublet of inequity.
Synonyms
dark, darkness, evil, immorality, injustice, shabbiness, unfairness, wickedness
Scrabble Score: 20
iniquity: valid Scrabble (US) TWL Wordiniquity: valid Scrabble Word in Merriam-Webster MW Dictionary
iniquity: valid Scrabble Word in International Collins CSW Dictionary