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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
notoriety
noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
gain notoriety (=become famous, especially for doing something bad)
▪ He gained notoriety as the author of a controversial novel.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ VERB
achieve
▪ He achieved notoriety in the first final by turning up ten minutes late for the start.
▪ This bloody action-comedy achieved notoriety because writer / director Robert Rodriguez made the film without studio help on a minuscule budget.
▪ For nearly 300 years it achieved notoriety for its private madhouses.
▪ This question has achieved some notoriety in two cases concerning telephone tapping.
▪ Some slogans achieve notoriety for being inappropriate, and are swiftly proved as such by events.
gain
▪ Nilsen gained notoriety a decade ago at the so-called house of horror in North London.
▪ And others will gain notoriety for how fiercely wild their machinery is.
▪ The only reason we did it was to gain notoriety.
▪ And it gained some notoriety for obduracy on female sufferance while the rest of the developed world was gradually seeing sense.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Salem's tourist industry plays on its notoriety for the witchcraft trials.
▪ Stewart, the new quarterback from Colorado, has gained a lot of notoriety for his versatility.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ And, more importantly, so did the notoriety.
▪ As a forest justice he earned some notoriety.
▪ Howandever, didn't Imelda take it into her head that she and Franklyn were on the brink of notoriety?
▪ In a bid for public notoriety, the bomber criticized the news blackout of his campaign.
▪ No further fuel should be added to his notoriety.
▪ Thereafter, Bourke enjoyed the notoriety of his escapades and even wrote a book about them.
▪ This bloody action-comedy achieved notoriety because writer / director Robert Rodriguez made the film without studio help on a minuscule budget.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Notoriety

Notoriety \No`to*ri"e*ty\ (n[=o]`t[-o]*r[imac]"[-e]*t[y^]), n. The quality or condition of being notorious; the state of being generally or publicly known; -- commonly used in an unfavorable sense; as, the notoriety of a crime.

They were not subjects in their own nature so exposed to public notoriety.
--Addison.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
notoriety

1590s, from Middle French notoriété or directly from Medieval Latin notorietatem (nominative notorietas), from notorius "well-known" (see notorious).

Wiktionary
notoriety

n. The condition of being infamous or notorious.

WordNet
notoriety

n. the state of being known for some unfavorable act or quality [syn: ill fame]

Wikipedia
Notoriety (2013 film)

Notoriety is an Iranian movie directed by Masoud Dehnamaki in 2013.

Usage examples of "notoriety".

If he was amused at the ease with which fools can be humbugged, he must also have been astounded at the awful villainy of those who, perfect strangers to him, had perjured themselves for the sake of notoriety.

If at the present time ten years of public notoriety have passed over any doctrine professing to be of importance in medical science, and if it has not succeeded in raising up a powerful body of able, learned, and ingenious advocates for its claims, the fault must be in the doctrine and not in the medical profession.

If his Grace, however, were soon reconciled to this not very agreeable notoriety, and consoled himself under the activity of his libellers by the conviction that their prolusions did not even amount to a caricature, he was less easily satisfied with another performance which speedily advanced its claims to public notice.

Even on the streets of the smiling town of Ludwigsburg, the men on the staff of the Z Commission went ungreeted and unacknowledged by the citizens, to whom their presence brought an undesired notoriety.

Widmerpool a lasting notoriety which his otherwise unscintillating career at school could never wholly dispel.

The notoriety gives them a clientele that is the envy of the empire, and the usual mix was present: Bonzes and Tao-shih swapped filthy stories with burglars and cutthroats, and eminent artists and poets flirted with pretty girls and boys while high government officials played cards with the pimps.

Ormand, himself a criminologist, had recognized the fact that Agent X deserved notoriety of another sort than the type city police records gave him.

This particular group of Livers, unlike some other tribes in Willoughby County, was enjoying its temporary notoriety.

I was enjoying the anonymity that kept them from manipulating me, and enjoying my notoriety as Lyrebird too much.

Educated by Jesuits for eight years, Warren was able to regard his money, his notoriety, his four ex-wives with a combination of dispassionate wit, profound distress and a monumental Thomistic sense of the divine logic behind it all.

After his return from Virginia he and his exploits were the subject of many a stage play and spectacle, but whether his vanity was more flattered by this mark of notoriety than his piety was offended we do not know.

By the time that she was twenty, she had fled her home and established herself in Budapest where, overnight, she gained notoriety as the cause of a sabre duel in which both combatants were slain.

By the time that she was twenty, she had fled her home and established herself in Budapest where, overnight, she gained notoriety as the cause of a saber duel in which both combatants were slain.

In an establishment, I might add, which I chose for our lodgings due to its very notoriety as a hotbed of carousal and debauchery.

All that is necessary is for a man of good faith, or some rogue desirous of money or notoriety, to stand in some frequented place and begin preaching.