calumny

noun·/ˈkæl.əm.ni/

A malicious falsehood spoken against someone; slander with intent, meant to stain rather than to describe (formal). Calumny does not contend with truth. It aims at damage.

The calumny spread faster than any correction could follow, because outrage travels light.

Etymology

From Latin calumnia “false accusation, trickery,” a word at home in courts and quarrels. Its history is juridical, but its effect is social: reputation as something that can be bruised by speech.

Related Words

slanderspoken defamation; a close legal neighbor
libelwritten defamation; the documentary cousin
aspersiona figurative “throwing of dirt”
defamationthe umbrella term