Can I do anything else with aspersions other than cast them? [closed]

You can also sprinkle them. [aspersion: (n) An attack on somebody's reputation or good name, often in the phrase to cast aspersions upon (Dict.com)] (label) ...a sprinkling of [aspersions]

Merriam-Webster: "sprinkle" def: scatter or pour small drops or particles of a substance over (an object or surface).

Maybe a sprinkling of aspersions will make them appear more tiny vs. this casting aspersions upon her.

Perhaps a sprinkling of aspersions sounds less inoffensive; somewhat harmless, or innocuous--somehow. Seem like a piddling of aspersions. Maybe because there's less of them. I don't know. Sometimes, if I apply a sprinkling of aspersions on my wife instead of casting, she thinks them funny. Try a sprinkling of aspersions instead. If that doesn't work, you can always go back to casting aspersions upon her, or even try dusting or powdering her with aspersions. See if that works.

Good luck!


You can heap aspersions on someone. Of course you can also throw them.

You can lay aspersions upon someone too.

I suppose it would also be possible to say, with some license, that someone went about pissing aspersions— on the free press perhaps. With similar latitude you could say that someone went about spluttering aspersions or training a steady stream of aspersions, as the case may be.


The manner in which you are using aspersion(s) here is only in the metaphorical sense of the word. An "aspersion" is either the act of sprinkling, or that which is sprinkled. E.g 1846 W. Maskell Monumenta Ritualia Ecclesiae Anglicanae I. 209 St. Peter..baptized five thousand on one day; but this must have been by aspersion. (OED).

It is only when you get to OED senses 5 and 6 that you see reference to the innuendo sense. And in only a few of the examples given, as you will see, are they "cast".

  1. The action of casting damaging imputations, false and injurious charges, or unjust insinuations; calumniation, defamation.

1633 G. Herbert Temple: Sacred Poems 89 Who by aspersions throw a stone At th' head of others, hit their own.

1781 W. Cowper Friendship xvii Aspersion is the babbler's trade, To listen is to lend him aid.

1873 E. M. Goulburn Thoughts Pers. Relig. iv. xi. 347 Imperious aspersion of God.

  1. A damaging report; a charge that tarnishes the reputation; a calumny, slander, false insinuation. Esp. in the phr. to cast aspersions upon.

1596 Spenser View State Ireland Pref. 2 Which may seeme to lay..any particular aspersion upon some families.

a1661 T. Fuller Worthies (1662) Bristol 37 As false is the Aspersion of his being a great Usurer.

1692 King James II Let. 2 Apr. (BL Stowe 158 f. 61) Even that precatuion [having witnesses at the prince's birth] was not enough to hinder Us from the malicious Aspersions of such as were resolved to deprive Us of Our Royal Right.

1749 H. Fielding Tom Jones IV. xi. vii. 155 I defy all the World to cast a just Aspersion on my Character.

1859 ‘G. Eliot’ Adam Bede I. i. v. 113 Vindicating myself from the aspersions.