add insult to injury
add insult to injury
English
Verb
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Definition
To further a loss with mockery or indignity; to worsen an already unfavorable situation.
Etymology
Derived from the fables of Phaedrus in the first century CE. The story was of a bald man who swats at a fly which has just landed on his head, but instead hits himself on the head. The fly comments, "You wished to kill me for a touch. What will you do to yourself since you have added insult to injury?" (quid facies tibi, Iniuriae qui addideris contumeliam?) The actual wording appears in English from the middle of the 18th century.
Example Sentences
- "As if the hostile takeover weren't enough, to add insult to injury they scrapped ninety percent of our products and replaced them with their own."
- "[...] the line crossed over an iron bridge spanning Ludgate Hill itself [...] neatly obliterating any view of St Paul's from Ludgate Circus and Fleet Street. A thousand people had put their names to a petition against the bridge. To add insult to injury it carried a small thicket of railway signals as well as regular steam trains."
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