Dictionary Definition
embarrassment
Noun
1 the shame you feel when your inadequacy or
guilt is made public
2 the state of being embarrassed (usually by some
financial inadequacy); "he is currently suffering financial
embarrassments"
3 some event that causes someone to be
embarrassed; "the outcome of the vote was an embarrassment for the
liberals" [ant: disembarrassment]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- A state of discomfort arising from bashfulness.
- A state of confusion arising from hesitation or difficulty in choosing.
- A person or thing which is the cause of humiliation to another.
- Kevin, you are an embarrassment to this family.
- Losing this highly publicized case was an embarrassment to the firm.
- Kevin, you are an embarrassment to this family.
Translations
state of discomfort
- Finnish: kiusaantuneisuus, nolostuminen
- Kurdish:
- Sorani: تهریقی
- Spanish: vergüenza , corte , pena , plancha , pudor , roche
state of confusion
- Finnish: hämmennys
person whose actions cause humiliation
- Finnish: hämmennys
Extensive Definition
Embarrassment is an emotional state experienced upon
having a socially or professionally unacceptable act or condition
witnessed by or revealed to others. Usually some amount of loss of
honour or dignity is involved, but how much and the type depends on
the embarrassing situation.
It is similar to shame, except that shame (at least
in the West) may be experienced for an act known only to oneself.
Also, embarrassment usually carries the connotation of being caused
by an act that is merely socially unacceptable, rather than morally
wrong.
Causes
Embarrassment can be personal, caused by unwanted
attention to private matters or personal flaws or mishaps. Some
causes of embarrassment stem from personal actions, such as being
caught in a lie or in making a mistake, losing badly in a
competition, being caught performing bodily functions such as
flatulence or
engaging in sex.
In many cultures, being seen nude or inappropriately dressed is
a particularly stressful form of embarrassment (see modesty).
Personal embarrassment could also stem from the
actions of others which place the embarrassed person in a socially
awkward situation, such as having one's awkward baby pictures shown
to friends, having someone make a derogatory comment about one's
appearance or behavior, discovering one is the victim of gossip, being rejected by another
person (see also humiliation), being made the
focus of attention (e.g. birthday celebrants,
newlyweds), or even witnessing someone else's embarrassment.
Personal embarrassment is usually accompanied by
some combination of blushing, sweating, nervousness, stammering, and fidgeting.
Sometimes the embarrassed person will try to mask embarrassment
with smiles or nervous
laughter, especially in etiquette situations; such a response
is more common in certain cultures, which may lead to
misunderstanding. There may even be an angry response depending on
the perceived seriousness of the situation.
The idea that embarrassment serves an apology or
appeasement function originated with Goffman (1967) who argued the
embarrassed individual “demonstrates that he/she is at least
disturbed by the fact and may prove worthy at another time”. Semin
& Manstead (1982) demonstrated social functions of
embarrassment whereby the perpetrator of knocking over a sales
display (the ‘bad act’) was deemed more likeable by others if
he/she appeared embarrassed than if he/she appeared unconcerned –
regardless of restitution behaviour (rebuilding the display). The
capacity to experience embarrassment can also be seen to be
functional for the group or culture. It has been demonstrated that
those who are not prone to embarrassment are more likely to engage
in antisocial behaviour – for example, adolescent boys who
displayed more embarrassment were found to be less likely to engage
in aggressive/delinquent behaviours. Similarly, embarrassment
exhibited by boys more likely to engage in aggressive/delinquent
behaviour was less than one-third of that exhibited by
non-aggressive boys (Ketlner et al. 1995). Thus proneness to
embarrassment (i.e. a concern for how one is evaluated by others)
can act as a brake on behaviour that would be dysfunctional for
group or culture
Professional embarrassment
Embarrassment can also be professional or
official, especially after statements expressing confidence in a
stated course of action, or willful disregard for evidence.
Embarrassment increases greatly in instances involving official
duties or workplace facilities, large amounts of money or
materials, or loss of human life. Examples of causes of include a
government's failed public policy, exposure of corrupt practices or
unethical behavior, a celebrity whose personal habits receive
public scrutiny or face legal action, or officials caught in
serious personally embarrassing situations. Even small errors or
miscalculations can lead to significantly greater official
embarrassment if it is discovered that there was willful disregard
for evidence or directives involved (e.g. see Space
Shuttle Challenger).
Not all official failures result in official
embarrassment, even if the circumstances lead to some slight
personal embarrassment for the people involved. For example, losing
a close political election might cause some personal embarrassment
for the candidate but generally would be considered an honorable
loss in the profession and thus not necessarily lead to
professional embarrassment. Similarly, a scientist might be
personally disappointed and embarrassed if one of his hypotheses
was proven wrong, but would not normally suffer professional
embarrassment as a result. By contrast, exposure of falsified data
supporting a scientific claim (e.g. see Hwang
Woo-Suk) would likely lead to professional embarrassment in the
scientific community.
Professional or official embarrassment is often
accompanied by public expressions of anger, denial of involvement,
or attempts to minimize the consequences. Sometimes the embarrassed
entity will issue press statements, remove or distance themselves
from sub-level employees, attempt to carry on as if nothing
happened, suffer income loss, emigrate, or completely vanish from
public view.
Medical
In a medical context, embarrassment is a synonym
for distress, or physiological difficulty of some kind, such as
fetal
embarrassment or respiratory
embarrassment.
Etymology
The English word embarrassed has taken an unusual path into English. The first written usage of embarrass in English was in 1664 by Samuel Pepys in his diary. The word was derived from the French word embarrasser, "to block," or "obstruct",1 whose first recorded usage was by Michel de Montaigne in 1580. The French word was derived from the Spanish embarazar, whose first recorded usage was in 1460 in Cancionero de Stúñiga (Songbook of Stúñiga) by Álvaro de Luna.2 The Spanish word comes from the Portuguese embaraçar, which is a combination of the prefix em- (from Latin im- for "in-") with baraço or baraça, "a noose", or "rope".3 Baraça originated before the Romans began their conquest of the Iberian Peninsula in 218 BC.4 Thus, baraça could be related to the Celtic word barr, "tuft." (Celtic people actually settled much of Spain and Portugal beginning in the 700s BC, the second group of people to do so.)5 However, it certainly is not directly derived from it, as the substitution of r for rr in Ibero-Romantic languages was not a known occurrence.Some say the Spanish
word actually came from the Italian imbarazzare, from imbarazzo,
"obstacle" or "obstruction." That word came from imbarrare, "to
block," or "bar," which is a combination of in-, "in" with barra,
"bar" (from the Vulgar Latin
barra, which is of unknown origin).6 The problem
with this theory is that the first known usage of the word in
Italian was by Bernardo
Davanzati (1529-1606), long after the word had entered
Spanish.7
See also
- Blushing
- Modesty
- Humiliation
- Shame
- Guilt
- Face (social concept) (often found in Asian cultures)
- Humiliation
References
- "embarrass," The Oxford English Dictionary, (1989) [Accessed February 15, 2006].
- Joan Corominas and José Pacual, "embarazar," Diccionario crítico etimológico castellano e hispánico, (Gredos, 1980) Vol. II, p. 555-556.
- "embarrass," Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged (2002) [Accessed February 15, 2006].
- Corominas, "embarazar."
- "Iberian," Encyclopaedia Britannica, [Accessed February 15, 2006].
- Corominas, "embarazar."
- "embarrass," The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, (2000) [Accessed February 15, 2006].
External links
embarrassment in Arabic: حرج
embarrassment in Breton: Dïaes
embarrassment in German: Verlegenheit
embarrassment in German: Peinlichkeit
embarrassment in Estonian: Piinlikkus
embarrassment in Esperanto: Embaraso
embarrassment in Hebrew: מבוכה
embarrassment in Norwegian:
Forlegenhet
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abasement, abashment, absorption, agitation, awkwardness, baffle, bafflement, bashfulness, befuddlement, bewilderment, bind, bother, botheration, broken fortune,
burden, burthen, cargo, chagrin, chaos, charge, cloud, clumsiness, clutch, comedown, complication, confoundment, confusion, constraint, coyness, cross, crunch, cumbrance, daze, deadweight, debasement, deflation, demureness, demurity, descent, difficulties, difficulty, dilemma, disadvantage, discombobulation,
discomfiture,
discomfort, discomposure, disconcert, disconcertedness,
disconcertion,
disconcertment,
discountenance,
disgrace, disorder, disorganization,
disorientation,
distress, disturbance, dump, embarrassing position,
encumbrance,
engagement, enigma, enmeshment, entanglement, excess, fine how-do-you-do,
fix, flummox, flurry, fluster, flutter, fog, freight, frenzy, fuddle, fuddlement, genteel poverty,
hamper, handicap, hangdog look, hard
pinch, hardship,
haze, hell to pay, hobble, hot water, how-do-you-do,
humbled pride, humiliation, imbroglio, impecuniosity, impecuniousness,
impediment, impedimenta, implication, imposition, inclusion, inconvenience, insolvency, involution, involvement, jam, jumble, letdown, light purse, load, lumber, maze, mess, mist, mix, morass, mortification, mousiness, muddle, muddlement, mystery, narrow means, nonplus, onus, oversupply, pack, parlous straits, pass, penalty, perplexity, perturbation, pickle, pinch, plight, poorness, pother, poverty, predicament, pretty pass,
pretty pickle, pretty predicament, problem, profusion, pucker, put-down, puzzle, puzzlement, quagmire, quandary, quicksand, relation, riddle, ruffle, scrape, self-abasement,
self-abnegation, self-consciousness, self-diminishment, setdown, shame, shamefacedness, shamefastness, shuffle, shyness, skittishness, slender
means, slough, spot, squeeze, stagefright, stammering, stew, sticky wicket, strain, strait, straitened circumstances,
straits, superabundance, superfluity, surplus, swamp, sweat, swivet, tight spot, tight
squeeze, tightrope,
timidity, timidness, timorousness, tizzy, tricky spot, trouble, unassuredness, unease, uneasiness, unholy mess,
unprosperousness,
unsettlement,
upset, vexation, voluntary poverty,
vows of poverty, weight,
white elephant