skorn: Fox Talbot connects this English word with the Danish skarn, “dirt,†“ordure†“mud,†“mire.†As distinguished from such words as “mock,†“deride,†“scoff,†all of which refer specifically to the various ways in which scorn finds outward expression, scorn itself denotes a subjective state or reaction.
Further, this state or reaction is not simple but complex. It includes a sense of superiority, resentment, and aversion. This reaction occurs when one is confronted with a person or a proposition that by challenging certain things for itself evokes a vivid sense of one's own superiority and awakens mingled resentment, repulsion and contempt by the hollowness of its claims and its intrinsic inferiority or worse. Scorn is a hotter, fiercer emotion than disdain or contempt. It is obvious that scorn may - indeed, it not uncommonly does - arise in connection with an not grounded, arrogant sense of self-esteem.
The word, outside of the phrase “laugh to scorn,†is found only in the Old Testament, and then only 4 times (; King James Version, ; ; ), and it represents three different Hebrew words for none of which it is a suitable rendering. The two words “thought scorn†in represent but one in Hebrew, namely, baÌ„zaÌ„h, for which “disdain†would be a nearer equivalent. In (the King James Version) the word translated “scorn†is misÌ£hÌ£aÌ„kÌ£, “an object of laughter,†“laughing-stock.†In ; the Hebrew word is la‛agh from a root, probably meaning “to stutter,†“stammer,†for which “mocking†is a better English equivalent. In the King James Version ; , la‛agh is rendered “scorningâ€. (the rendering given in to laÌ„coÌ„n, a word from a totally different root and one much more nearly approximating the fundamental idea of the English word “Scorn.†In and laÌ„coÌ„n is rendered “scornfulâ€).
As a verb the word is the translation given to laÌ„'agh, “to mock†( parallel ; ; , “all laugh to scornâ€); kÌ£aÌ„las = “to scoff†(, margin “Greek: scoffeth,†but text still “scornethâ€); for the noun cehÌ£oÌ„kÌ£, “laughter†(); saÌ„hÌ£akÌ£ = to laugh,†“laugh at†(, ; ), with the noun sehÌ£oÌ„kÌ£, “laugh to scorn†(the Revised Version (British and American) “laughing-stock,†); luÌ„c = “to scoff†(as used in ethical and religious connections) (; ; , all “scoff†in the Revised Version (British and American)); in the Revised Version (British and American), not happily, “mock at.†the Revised Version (British and American) is warranted in substituting “scoff†for “scorn†because the context indicates some form of outward expression of the scorn.
The Revised Version (British and American) always (except ; Sirach 6:4; 1 Macc 10:70) retains “laugh to scorn†(; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; 2 Esdras 2:21; Judith 12:12; The Wisdom of Solomon 4:18; Sirach 7:11; 13:7; 20:17; ; ; ). The verb in Apocrypha and the New Testament is usually καταγελαÌω, katagelaÌoÌ„, but in The Wisdom of Solomon 4:1 ἐκγελαÌω, ekgelaÌoÌ„; in Sirach 13:7 καταμωκαÌομαι, katamoÌ„kaÌmai; and in 2 Esdras 2:21 inrideo. In addition “scorn†is retained in ; , ; 2 Esdras 8:56 (contemno). In “scorn†is changed to “mock at†but elsewhere invariably to “scoff.â€
Scorner is the translation of the participle of luÌ„c and once of the participle of laÌ„cac. For “scorner†the Revised Version (British and American) everywhere substitutes - properly - “scoffer.†Outside of Proverbs (and ) the word is to be found only in . The force of the word has been well indicated by Cheyne, who says that the “scorner (scoffer) is one who despises that which is holy and avoids the company of the noble 'wise men,' but yet in his own vain way seeks for truth; his character is marked by arrogance as that of the wise is characterized by devout caution.â€