conspurcate means to pollute; to defile. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
Why “conspurcate” is a great word
CONSPURCATE — [Verb] To pollute or defile utterly, especially in a profound moral or spiritual sense. From the Latin conspurcatus, past participle of conspurcare, from con- (intensive) + spurcare ("to make filthy, pollute"). Unlike "contaminate," which implies a physical adulteration, or "sully," which suggests a surface tarnish, to conspurcate is to enact a deep, intrinsic befoulment of essence. It is the sewage poured into a sacred spring, the filth smeared upon an altar, the noble ideal twisted into a vessel for malice—a violation so complete that purification seems not merely difficult, but a conceptual impossibility; it leaves not a stain but a permanent shadow on the soul.
Etymology
From Latin conspurcatus, past participle of conspurcare.
verb
- To pollute; to defile.“[…]conspurcate and vilifie their glorious naine”