˜yÐÄvlog

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malfeasant

[ mal-fee-zuhnt ]

noun

  1. a person who engages in an act that is illegal, legally unjustified, or harmful, especially a public official or person in a position of public trust:

    We will not restore the people’s confidence with bland assurances that the malfeasants are mere outliers who will be punished.



adjective

  1. (especially of a public official or person in a position of public trust) engaging in an act that is illegal, legally unjustified, or harmful:

    This government zealously pursues malfeasant civil servants and prosecutes them.

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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of malfeasant1

First recorded in 1830–40; malfeas(ance) ( def ) + -ant ( def )
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

The Republican-controlled board’s newest rule allows county officials to delay certification if poll workers comply imperfectly with their long list of new and old rules—irregularities they can call “malfeasant.â€

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He called on the TEA to expand its investigation and he demanded that members of the school board investigate "themselves for their own malfeasant actions."

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The 2010 complaint concerned a colleague, the director of our clinical pathology laboratory and one of our most distinguished African American scientists, who was being subjected to malfeasant actions by the university.

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In this case the malfeasant was film critic David Edelstein, who made a stupid, quickly deleted, misfired “joke†on his private Facebook page, regarding the death of Last Tango in Paris director Bernardo Bertolucci.

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As hobbyists and malfeasants alike turn neighborhood parks into airports, the newly democratized skies are becoming increasingly crowded.

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