DYSLOGISTIC

Source: 567

Dys′lo‐gis″tic (?), a. [[Gr. δυσ- ill, bad, + � discourse, fr. � to speak.]] Unfavorable; not commendatory; — opposed to eulogistic. There is no course of conduct for which dyslogistic or eulogistic epithets may be found. J. F. Stephen. The paternity of dyslogistic — no bantling, but now almost a centenarian — is adjudged to that genius of common sense, Jeremy Bentham. Fitzed. Hall.