English Language & Usage Asked on February 6, 2021
Consider the extreme example of a person exerting all efforts to defame people around them, whether in work or their own social group, collecting innocent emails and letters from people and later trying to use them as an evidence that those people have lied and are corrupt or ‘unworthy’.
However, they go to all lengths to protect their own integrity and ‘uprightness’ by comparing themselves to the so-called liars and unworthy people by always mentioning their own good points etc.
I thought about ‘Character assassin’ or ‘defamer’ but it doesn’t seem to give the full meaning.
Is their not a word / term used by psychiatrists to describe such a person?
Maybe "mean" would sum it all up.
Answered by Mohammad Kamran on February 6, 2021
"Sneaky" is the best I can think of (behaving in a secret and sometimes dishonest or unpleasant way).
Answered by user19148 on February 6, 2021
A calumniator or slanderer is defined as someone who maliciously and without reason imputes a crime or fault to another, of which he is innocent. To calumniate means to make maliciously or knowingly false statements about someone.
What you describe is known as "building yourself up by tearing others down." People who engage in that behavior are probably suffering from low self-esteem, but I don't know if there is a psychiatric term that applies to such a person (or if you really should label someone with a psychiatric term).
Answered by JLG on February 6, 2021
Such a person could be called self righteous.
Although someone could be self righteous without necessarily also being a slanderer, it is often the case that a self righteous person is also critical of the flaws they perceive in others.
Answered by Joel Brown on February 6, 2021
I would call that person a disparager.
dis·par·age
dis·parage·ment n. dis·parag·er n. dis·parag·ing·ly adv.
EDIT: Thank you, jwpat7, I did copy this from http://www.thefreedictionary.com/disparager
disparager. (n.d.) The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. (2003). Retrieved May 1 2012 from http://www.thefreedictionary.com/disparager
Answered by Aaron Collie on February 6, 2021
At the risk of being dramatic, they sound sociopathic.
Answered by cornbread ninja 麵包忍者 on February 6, 2021
A pair of words, that would be more descriptive than an accurate label, could be insecure narcissist. Further, it snugs in under the guise of an "oxymoron", seemingly.
Answered by Boudreaux on February 6, 2021
I agree that "sociopathic" may come closest to an accurate psychological label for the behavior described, but I think that a metaphorical characterization may be even more apt. In that spirit, I recommend "sanctimonious viper." According to Merriam-Webster's Eleventh Collegiate Dictionary (2003), "sanctimonious" means "hypocritically pious or devout," which captures the aspect of false virtuousness, and a "viper" is a venomous snake.
Answered by Yargs on February 6, 2021
That person would be a twofaced, duplicitous, double-dealing, underhanded, backstabbing snake in the grass.
Answered by blumuze on February 6, 2021
A snake in the grass is an unethical person, someone who is harmful but who does not seem to be.
Answered by chasly - supports Monica on February 6, 2021
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