early 15c., "rejected as worthless," from Late Latin reprobatus, past participle of reprobare "disapprove, reject, condemn," from Latin re- "opposite of, reversal of previous condition" (see re-) + probare "prove to be worthy" (see probate (n.)). Earliest form of the word in English was a verb, meaning "to disapprove" (early 15c.).
reprobate (n.)
1540s, "one rejected by God," from reprobate (adj.). Sense of "abandoned or unprincipled person" is from 1590s.
God reprobated the unrepenting sinner
These ideas were reprobated
the reprobate conduct of a gambling aristocrat
reprisal
reprise
repro
reproach
reproachful
reprobate
reprobation
reprocess
reproduce
reproduceable
reproductible