scarlet letter

English

Noun

scarlet letter (plural scarlet letters)

  1. (historical) The letter "A" in scarlet cloth required to be worn by those convicted of adultery in 17th-century Puritan New England.
    • 1850, Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter:
      The Scarlet Letter [title]
    • 2012, Faramerz Dabhoiwala, The Origins of Sex, Penguin, published 2013, page 44:
      In the early seventeenth century, all the colonies of New England enacted harsh laws against unchastity: banishment, imprisonment, severe public flogging, the wearing of scarlet letters and other shaming garments for the rest of one's life.
  2. (figurative, by extension) A highly visible stigma.
    • 2018, Dianna E. Anderson, Problematic: How Toxic Callout Culture Is Destroying Feminism:
      The scarlet letters that current discourse has slapped upon people deemed “problematic,” deemed “unreachable” for feminism, have created consternation []
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