menyampah
Indonesian
Etymology
From meng- + sampah (“rubbish”). Not inherited from the identical Malay menyampah (“to loathe”).
Verb
menyampah
Further reading
- “menyampah” in Kamus Besar Bahasa Indonesia, Jakarta: Agency for Language Development and Cultivation – Ministry of Education, Culture, Research, and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia, 2016.
Malay
FWOTD – 24 September 2022
Pronunciation
- (Standard Malaysian) IPA(key): /mə.ɲam.pah/
Verb
menyampah (Jawi spelling مڽامڤه)
- (intransitive) to loathe or hate upon
- Synonym: benci
- 2013 May 21, Abd. Aziz Itar, “Tidak mahu orang menyampah”, in Utusan Malaysia, archived from the original on 14 October 2018:
- "Bagi saya hubungan kami berjalan dengan baik dan tidak ada apa-apa yang hendak disorokkan. Sebabnya kalau lagi disorok sesuatu hubungan itu, saya takut nanti orang akan menyampah. Kenapa perlu berahsia kerana lambat laun orang akan tahu juga nanti," katanya lagi.
- "To me the relationship is going well and there is nothing to hide. Because if I were to continue to hide the relationship, I fear that people would hate (me). Why keep a secret when people would eventually know," he says.
- (literary, intransitive) to feel disgusted or repelled upon (usually caused by unpleasant sight or smell)
- Synonyms: meluat, menjijikkan
- Guru besar berasa menyampah melihat bekas muridnya yang mempunyai rambut berwarna ganjil.
- The headmaster felt disgusted to see his former student with brightly colored hair.
- (colloquial, intransitive) to disturb somebody
- Synonym: mengacau
- (obsolete, intransitive) to resemble rubbish in appearance
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