scold$72814$ - translation to ελληνικό
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scold$72814$ - translation to ελληνικό

TYPE OF PUBLIC NUISANCE IN ENGLISH COMMON LAW
Scold; Communis rixatrix
  • Punishing a common scold in the [[ducking stool]]

scold      
n. φιλόψογη γυναίκα, φιλόνικη γυναίκα, στρίγκλα

Ορισμός

scold
(scolds, scolding, scolded)
If you scold someone, you speak angrily to them because they have done something wrong. (FORMAL)
If he finds out, he'll scold me...
Later she scolded her daughter for having talked to her father like that...
'You should be at school,' he scolded.
VERB: V n, V n for n, V with quote

Βικιπαίδεια

Common scold

In the common law of crime in England and Wales, a common scold was a type of public nuisance—a troublesome and angry person who broke the public peace by habitually chastising, arguing and quarrelling with their neighbours. Most punished for scolding were women, though men could be found to be scolds.

The offence, which carried across in the English colonisation of the Americas, was punished by fines and increasingly less often by ways intended to humiliate in public: dunking (being arm-fastened into a chair and dunked into a river or pond), or paraded through the street on wheels; being put in the scold's bridle (branks); or the stocks. Selling bad bread or bad ale was also punished in these ways in some parts of England in medieval centuries.

None of the physical punishments is known to have been administered (such as by magistrates) since an instance in 1817 that involved a wheeling through the streets. Washington D.C. authorities imposed a fine against a writer against clerics, declared a common scold, in 1829. The offence and punishment were abolished in England and Wales in 1967, and formally in New Jersey in 1972.