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cesspool
[ses-pool]
noun
a cistern, well, or pit for retaining the sediment of a drain or for receiving the sewage from a house.
any filthy receptacle or place.
any place of moral filth or immorality.
a cesspool of iniquity.
cesspool
/ ˈsɛsˌpuːl, ˈsɛsˌpɪt /
noun
Also called: sink. sump. a covered cistern, etc, for collecting and storing sewage or waste water
a filthy or corrupt place
a cesspool of iniquity
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of cesspool1
Example Sentences
She pointed out that, despite the president’s false rhetoric depicting the District as a cesspool of crime and violence, crime rates were at an historic 30-year low.
Kennedy, a longtime anti-vaccine activist, has falsely called mRNA vaccines “the deadliest ever made” and referred to the CDC as a “cesspool of corruption.”
He thinks Los Angeles is a cesspool and that flying the Mexican flag in the United States is an act of insurrection.
He also turned the website into an even greater cesspool of misinformation and hate speech by gutting content moderation.
Throw in Elon Musk’s degradation of the once lively discourse on Twitter into the disinformation and conspiracy cesspool of X.
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