victim
/ˈvɪktəm/
The word conveys a state of helplessness and lack of agency. It implies that the harm suffered was imposed from the outside—whether by another person, a natural disaster, or an unlucky set of circumstances. In modern psychological and legal contexts, there is a tension between being a "victim" (the passive recipient of harm) and a "survivor" (someone who has overcome that harm). Using "victim" often emphasizes the trauma and the injustice of the event, whereas "survivor" emphasizes resilience. When used in the context of scams or tricks, it carries a slight nuance of vulnerability or naivety, though the blame still primarily rests with the perpetrator. The sacrificial sense is archaic in daily conversation but remains critical in religious and historical contexts, where the victim is an innocent offering to a higher power.
💬Casual Conversation
The new 'no-email' policy makes us all victims of our own silence.
Cut the fluff. The staff is just falling behind on deliverables.
Meanings
A person harmed, injured, or killed as a result of a crime, accident, or other event or action.
"The rescue team worked tirelessly to save every victim of the earthquake."
Etymology
Derived from the Latin victima, which refers to a sacrificial animal. This term is rooted in the Latin verb vincere, meaning to conquer or overcome, reflecting the status of the subject as one who has been defeated or subdued by a higher power or an aggressor. Over centuries, the meaning expanded from purely religious sacrifice to encompass any individual suffering harm or misfortune.