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reprobate (adj.)

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.

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Definitions of reprobate from WordNet
1
reprobate (v.)
reject (documents) as invalid;
reprobate (v.)
abandon to eternal damnation;
God reprobated the unrepenting sinner
reprobate (v.)
express strong disapproval of;
These ideas were reprobated
Synonyms: condemn / decry / objurgate / excoriate
2
reprobate (n.)
a person without moral scruples;
Synonyms: miscreant
3
reprobate (adj.)
deviating from what is considered moral or right or proper or good;
the reprobate conduct of a gambling aristocrat
Synonyms: depraved / perverse / perverted
From wordnet.princeton.edu