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What is the noun for stigmatisation?

What's the noun for stigmatisation? Here's the word you're looking for.

stigma
  1. A mark of infamy or disgrace.
  2. A scar or birthmark.
  3. (plural) A mark on the body corresponding to one of the wounds of the Crucifixion on Jesus' body.
  4. (botany) The sticky part of a flower that receives pollen during pollination.
  5. A ligature of the Greek letters sigma and tau, (Ϛ/ϛ).
  6. Synonyms:
  7. Examples:
    1. “Today, the hymning of mental frailty has significantly reduced the stigma of idleness.”
      “For example, petals may wilt and abscise more rapidly after pollen deposition on the stigma or pollen tube growth through the style.”
      “Cohabitation was still frowned upon, illegitimate births a stigma and the nuclear family the accepted way of doing things.”
stigmatism
  1. (optics) Image-formation property of an optical system which focuses a single point source in object space into a single point in image space
  2. (medicine) Normal eyesight, anastigmatic state
  3. (pathology) State of having stigmata
  4. Examples:
    1. “Although there is a perceived stigmatism that is attached to assistance, I am not aware of any difficulties in this area.”
      “Does he feel there is an unfair stigmatism attached to those who launched their careers in commercial territory?”
      “Astigmatism, rather than a stigmatism, might require the wearing of spectacles.”
stigmatic
  1. One who has been branded as punishment.
  2. One who has been marked or deformed by nature.
  3. One who displays stigmata, the five wounds of Christ.
stigmatization
  1. The process or act of stigmatizing.
  2. (theology) The production of stigmata upon the body.
  3. Synonyms:
  4. Examples:
    1. “Neither, of course, does it reflect the incalculable emotional losses Japanese Americans suffered through stigmatization and incarceration.”
      “You're beginning to see the stigmatization of any alternative proposals on the pretext of confronting terrorism.”
      “Apart from displaying sheer ignorance, I suppose this stigmatization saves them thinking about the actual arguments being put forward.”
stigmatist
  1. A person whose body is marked by stigmata; a stigmatic
  2. Examples:
    1. “He based the script on the four Gospels and a book by 19th-century German stigmatist, the Venerable Anne Catherine Emmerich.”
      “He read the visions of the Venerable Sister Anne Catherine Emmerich, an eighteenth-century German stigmatist and mystic.”
      “Facts: the Italian stigmatist Padre Pio carried wounds that penetrated both hands and feet medially throughout his lifetime.”
stigmat
  1. (photography) A stigmatic lens or combination of lenses.
stigmatisation
  1. Alternative spelling of stigmatization
  2. Examples:
    1. “The processes and degrees of devaluation, distortion and stigmatisation are different for each group.”
      “Most mental illness is entirely treatable and the person experiencing this illness needs assistance not rejection and stigmatisation.”
      “Juvenile offenders and their families have specific rights to privacy to protect them from negative stigmatisation.”
stigmatizer
  1. One who stigmatizes.
stigme
  1. (obsolete, rare) Anglicised form of stigma
stigmat
  1. Anglicised form of stigma
stigmatisations
  1. plural of stigmatisation
stigmatizations
stigmatizers
  1. plural of stigmatizer
stigmatisms
  1. plural of stigmatism
stigmatists
  1. plural of stigmatist
stigmatics
  1. plural of stigmatic
stigmata
  1. plural form of stigma
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “This self should be free from mental and physical stigmata, which commonly characterize the disintegrated states making up multiple personality.”
      “There was mild gynecomastia, but there were no other stigmata of chronic liver disease.”
      “Mary quickly flipped through the book to a section that listed the symptoms of stigmata.”
stigmats
  1. plural of stigmat
stigmes
  1. plural of stigme
stigmas
  1. plural of stigma
  2. Synonyms:
  3. Examples:
    1. “Cross-pollinated flowers were not emasculated, and pollinations were performed by rubbing anthers onto stigmas.”
      “A Priapic episode is both a painful and embarrassing condition, made all the worse by current social stigmas against its sufferers.”
      “The stigmas were then pollinated with pollen from a flower whose anther had dehisced that day.”
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