sees the corporate scandal as yet another sign of the general abjection of our society
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He isn’t attracted to Martha but to abjection, to his own debasement.—
Shannon Keating,
Vulture,
24 Apr. 2024 This can involve extreme suffering or abjection; happiness is hardly the point.—
Nicole Flattery,
Harpers Magazine,
19 Sep. 2025 Rodrigo clearly understands that his band’s essence lies not only in its dreamy guitars but also in the total abjection beneath them.—
Spencer Kornhaber,
The Atlantic,
12 June 2026 Their authors also each humble characters who cling to superficial social graces in an attempt to evade abjection.—
Hannah Gold,
New Yorker,
17 June 2026 See All Example Sentences for abjection
Word History
Etymology
Middle English abjectioun "humbleness, abject state, outcasts," borrowed from Anglo-French or Late Latin; Anglo-French abjeccioun "rejection, outcasts," borrowed from Late Latin abjectiōn-, abjectiō "casting away, rejection, humbled condition, humbleness," going back to Latin, "dejection," from abicere "to throw down" + -tiōn-, -tiō, suffix of action nouns — more at abject