Home › Words › A › abjectureabjectureabjecture means abjection; forlornness.EtymologyFrom Latin abiectura.nounabjection; forlornnesse.g.“But he had none of the assumed, servile, oriental abjectures that leads man to revile himself as a worthless worm of the dust” — 1876, Transactions of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, volume 3:Definitions & examples from Wiktionary (CC BY-SA 3.0).Words closest in meaningBy meaning, not spelling — each word's AI semantic fingerprint, nearest first.abjectness 81% match — The state of being abject; abasement; meanness; servility. vs abjecture →abjection 80% match — A low or downcast condition; meanness of spirit; abasement; degradation. vs abjecture →abjectedness 78% match — The state of being abjected. vs abjecture →abject 72% match — Existing in or sunk to a low condition, position, or state; contemptible, despicable, miserable. vs abjecture →abjectly 71% match — In an abject fashion; with great shame; desperately. vs abjecture →abjectify 69% match — To treat or regard as abject. vs abjecture →abjective 69% match — Tending to make abject. vs abjecture →abjectification 69% match — The act or process of abjectifying someone or something. vs abjecture →