praise with faint damns
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Inversion of damn with faint praise.
Verb
[edit]praise with faint damns (third-person singular simple present praises with faint damns, present participle praising with faint damns, simple past and past participle praised with faint damns)
- (idiomatic, transitive) To provide minimal critique, implying that the criticism is the worst that could be said of someone or something.
- 1885, Henry Augustin Beers, Nathaniel Parker Willis, page 194:
- The former accordingly greeted his book with warm approval, and the latter praised it with faint damns.
- 2015 February 21, Blake Morrison, “Blake Morrison on Anthony Burgess the critic — ‘he aspired to know everything’”, in The Guardian, retrieved 3 March 2024:
- But his emphasis on the novel’s interest in sex was a come-on – a way of praising it with faint damns.