bastard

[bas-terd] /ˈbæs tərd/
noun
1.
a person born of unmarried parents; an illegitimate child.
2.
Slang.
  1. a vicious, despicable, or thoroughly disliked person:
    Some bastard slashed the tires on my car.
  2. a person, especially a man:
    The poor bastard broke his leg.
3.
something irregular, inferior, spurious, or unusual.
adjective
5.
illegitimate in birth.
6.
spurious; not genuine; false:
The architecture was bastard Gothic.
7.
of abnormal or irregular shape or size; of unusual make or proportions:
bastard quartz; bastard mahogany.
8.
having the appearance of; resembling in some degree:
a bastard Michelangelo; bastard emeralds.
9.
Printing. (of a character) not of the font in which it is used or found.
Origin
1250-1300; Middle English < Anglo-French bastard, Medieval Latin bastardus (from 11th century), perhaps < Germanic (Ingvaeonic) *bāst-, presumed variant of *bōst- marriage + Old French -ard -ard, taken as signifying the offspring of a polygynous marriage to a woman of lower status, a pagan tradition not sanctioned by the church; compare Old Frisian bost marriage < Germanic *bandstu-, a noun derivative of Indo-European *bhendh- bind; the traditional explanation of Old French bastard as derivative of fils de bast “child of a packsaddle” is doubtful on chronological and geographical grounds
Synonyms
6. fake, imitation, imperfect, sham, irregular, phony.
Examples from the web for bastard
  • God help him from killing the bastard with his bare hands.
  • Most files have a smooth, second or bastard cut.
  • So, I absolutely share your anger at motorists and understand why you want to take the bastard to court.
  • My father is too damaged and fragile to open himself to self-awareness; he remains an aggressive, tyrannical bastard.
  • He's a sneaky little bastard.
  • What an irresponsible bastard.
  • She takes bastard pieces and recreates these gorgeous light fixtures.
British Dictionary definitions for bastard

bastard

/ˈbɑːstəd; ˈbæs-/
noun
1.
(informal, offensive) an obnoxious or despicable person
2.
(informal, often jocular) a person, esp a man: lucky bastard
3.
(informal) something extremely difficult or unpleasant: that job is a real bastard
4.
(old-fashioned or offensive) a person born of unmarried parents; an illegitimate baby, child, or adult
5.
something irregular, abnormal, or inferior
6.
a hybrid, esp an accidental or inferior one
adjective (prenominal)
7.
(old-fashioned or offensive) illegitimate by birth
8.
irregular, abnormal, or inferior in shape, size, or appearance
9.
resembling a specified thing, but not actually being such: a bastard cedar
10.
counterfeit; spurious
Derived Forms
bastardly, adjective
Word Origin
C13: from Old French bastart, perhaps from bast in the phrase fils de bast son of the packsaddle (that is, of an unlawful and not the marriage bed), from Medieval Latin bastum packsaddle, of uncertain origin
Word Origin and History for bastard
n.

"illegitimate child," early 13c., from Old French bastard (11c., Modern French bâtard), "acknowledged child of a nobleman by a woman other than his wife," probably from fils de bast "packsaddle son," meaning a child conceived on an improvised bed (saddles often doubled as beds while traveling), with pejorative ending -art (see -ard). Alternative possibly is that the word is from Proto-Germanic *banstiz "barn," equally suggestive of low origin.

Not always regarded as a stigma; the Conqueror is referred to in state documents as "William the Bastard." Figurative sense of "something not pure or genuine" is late 14c.; use as a vulgar term of abuse for a man is attested from 1830. As an adjective from late 14c. Among the "bastard" words in Halliwell-Phillipps' "Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words" are avetrol, chance-bairn, by-blow, harecoppe, horcop, and gimbo ("a bastard's bastard").

Slang definitions & phrases for bastard

bastard

noun
  1. A man one dislikes or disapproves of, esp a mean, dishonest, self-serving man; prick, son of a bitch (late 1600s+)
  2. Anything unpleasant or arduous; bitch: Ain't it a bastard the way it keeps raining (1930s+)

bastard in the Bible

In the Old Testament the rendering of the Hebrew word _mamzer'_, which means "polluted." In Deut. 23:2, it occurs in the ordinary sense of illegitimate offspring. In Zech. 9:6, the word is used in the sense of foreigner. From the history of Jephthah we learn that there were bastard offspring among the Jews (Judg. 11:1-7). In Heb. 12:8, the word (Gr. nothoi) is used in its ordinary sense, and denotes those who do not share the privileges of God's children.