C1 noun #7,000 am häufigsten 4 Min. Lesezeit

ascribe

To say that something is caused by or belongs to a certain person or thing.

Explanation at your level:

Ascribe is a big word for beginners. It just means to say where something comes from. If you see a beautiful painting, you might ask, 'Who painted this?' When you find out, you ascribe the painting to that artist. You are saying, 'This artist made this.' It is like connecting two dots: the work and the person who did it. Keep it simple for now!

At this level, think of ascribe as a way to explain reasons. If you are late for school, you might say, 'I ascribe my lateness to the heavy traffic.' You are giving the reason for your problem. It is a very useful word for explaining why things happen. Just remember to use the word 'to' after it every time you use it.

As you get more comfortable, you will see ascribe used in more analytical ways. It is not just for physical objects like paintings; it is for ideas and feelings. You can ascribe a specific motive to a character in a book. For example, 'The author ascribes the hero's bravery to his childhood.' It helps you talk about the 'why' behind actions and events in a more sophisticated way.

Now you are using ascribe to show nuance. It is often used when we are not 100% sure about a cause but are making an educated guess. You might say, 'Experts ascribe the recent climate changes to human activity.' This shows you are reporting on an expert opinion or a theory. It is a great word for academic writing because it sounds objective and professional.

At the advanced level, ascribe allows you to discuss complex causality. You can use it to distinguish between direct causes and underlying reasons. For instance, 'While some ascribe the failure to lack of funding, others see it as a structural issue.' This contrastive usage is very common in high-level debates. It demonstrates that you understand that different people can ascribe different meanings to the same set of facts.

Mastering ascribe at this level involves understanding its subtle, almost literary weight. It is frequently used in historical or philosophical texts to discuss the attribution of virtues, flaws, or intellectual properties. You might read about how a culture ascribes divine power to nature, or how a critic ascribes a particular philosophical bias to a poet. The word implies a deep level of interpretation. It is not just about stating facts; it is about constructing a narrative or a theory about the origin of a concept. Using it correctly shows you can handle abstract, academic, and interpretive language with ease and precision.

Wort in 30 Sekunden

  • Ascribe means to attribute something to a cause or source.
  • Always use 'to' after the word.
  • It is a formal verb, great for academic writing.
  • It comes from the Latin word for writing.

Hey there! Let's talk about the word ascribe. At its heart, this word is all about credit and connection. When you ascribe something, you are essentially drawing a line between an event or a quality and its source.

Think of it as a way of saying, 'This came from that.' Whether it's blaming a rainy day on a low-pressure system or giving a brilliant quote to a famous philosopher, you are ascribing that outcome to a specific cause. It is a very useful verb when you want to sound precise about where things originate.

You will often see this word used in academic or professional settings. It helps clarify why things are the way they are. By using ascribe, you are taking a guess or making a statement about the origin of an idea, a trait, or an event. It’s a bit more formal than just saying 'blame' or 'credit,' which makes it perfect for writing essays or explaining complex ideas to a friend.

The history of ascribe is quite cool! It comes from the Latin word ascribere, which is a mash-up of ad- (meaning 'to') and scribere (meaning 'to write'). So, literally, it means 'to write to' or 'to add to a list.'

Back in the day, if you were ascribing something, you were literally writing someone's name down next to a property or a deed. It was a way of recording ownership or origin in a ledger. Over time, the meaning shifted from physically writing down a name to the more abstract idea of attributing a quality or a cause to someone.

It entered English in the late 14th century. Because it shares the same root as scribe, script, and describe, you can see how it’s all about the act of defining or identifying something through language. It’s a classic example of how a very literal, physical action evolves into a subtle, intellectual concept over hundreds of years of usage.

In daily life, ascribe is almost always followed by the preposition to. You ascribe [something] to [someone/something]. This is the most important pattern to remember.

You will hear people ascribe success to hard work, or ascribe a sudden change in behavior to stress. It is a formal word, so you might not hear it at a casual barbecue, but it is excellent for interviews, reports, or thoughtful conversations. It carries a tone of careful observation.

Common collocations include 'ascribe a motive to,' 'ascribe meaning to,' and 'ascribe qualities to.' These phrases help you articulate your reasoning. When you use it, you sound thoughtful and analytical. It’s a great way to elevate your language when you want to avoid simpler, more repetitive verbs like 'say' or 'think.' Just remember: it is a verb of attribution, not a verb of action.

While ascribe itself is a formal verb, it is closely related to concepts found in common expressions. Here are a few ways to think about attribution:

  • Give credit where credit is due: This is the informal, everyday version of ascribing a positive success to someone.
  • Point the finger: This is how we ascribe blame to someone, often in a negative context.
  • Lay at the door of: A literary way to ascribe responsibility for a failure to a specific person.
  • Put it down to: A very common, casual way to ascribe an event to a cause (e.g., 'I put it down to bad luck').
  • Pin it on: To ascribe a crime or a mistake to someone, often implying they might be innocent.

Using these expressions helps you navigate different levels of formality. Use ascribe for your formal essay, and 'put it down to' when chatting with your best friend over coffee!

Pronouncing ascribe is straightforward once you break it down: /əˈskraɪb/. The stress is on the second syllable, which is the 'scribe' part. It rhymes with describe, prescribe, and subscribe.

Grammatically, it is a transitive verb, meaning it needs an object. You must ascribe something. The pattern is always: Subject + ascribe + object + to + source. For example: 'She ascribes her success to her mentor.' You cannot just say 'She ascribes.' It feels incomplete!

It is not a noun, so you don't have a plural form. If you need a noun version, you would use ascription. The past tense is ascribed, and the present participle is ascribing. It’s a very stable word that doesn't have irregular forms, which makes it quite friendly for learners to master. Just watch out for that 'to'—it is the glue that holds the sentence together.

Fun Fact

It shares a root with the word 'scripture'!

Pronunciation Guide

UK /əˈskraɪb/

Sounds like 'uh-SKRY-b'.

US /əˈskraɪb/

Similar to UK, clear 'sk' sound.

Common Errors

  • Pronouncing the 'sc' as 'sh'.
  • Putting stress on the first syllable.
  • Dropping the 'b' at the end.

Rhymes With

describe prescribe subscribe transcribe inscribe

Difficulty Rating

Lesen 3/5

Moderate, found in formal texts.

Writing 4/5

Requires careful preposition usage.

Speaking 3/5

Formal register.

Hören 3/5

Common in lectures.

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

attribute cause reason

Learn Next

ascription impute assign

Fortgeschritten

attribute impute correlate

Grammar to Know

Transitive Verbs

He ascribes it to me.

Prepositional Phrases

to the source

Passive Voice

It is ascribed to him.

Examples by Level

1

I ascribe this song to the Beatles.

I say the Beatles wrote this song.

Verb + object + to + source.

2

He ascribes his win to luck.

He says luck helped him win.

Simple present.

3

They ascribe the fire to a candle.

They think a candle caused the fire.

Past tense.

4

We ascribe the mess to the dog.

We think the dog made the mess.

Subject + verb + object.

5

She ascribes the success to hard work.

She thinks hard work made her succeed.

Third person singular.

6

Do you ascribe this to him?

Do you think he did this?

Question form.

7

I cannot ascribe this to anyone.

I don't know who did this.

Negative form.

8

They ascribe the delay to rain.

They say rain caused the delay.

Noun + to + noun.

1

I ascribe my good health to eating vegetables.

2

She ascribes her talent to her mother.

3

They ascribe the error to a computer glitch.

4

He ascribes his mood to the weather.

5

We ascribe the discovery to a team effort.

6

Many ascribe the invention to Edison.

7

Do not ascribe bad motives to her.

8

I ascribe the noise to the neighbors.

1

Critics ascribe the film's success to its unique soundtrack.

2

He ascribes his calm demeanor to years of meditation.

3

Historians often ascribe the decline of the empire to economic factors.

4

She ascribes her professional growth to her mentor's guidance.

5

They ascribe the sudden change in policy to public pressure.

6

One should not ascribe too much importance to minor details.

7

Many people ascribe a spiritual meaning to the ritual.

8

The scientists ascribe the phenomenon to a rare atmospheric condition.

1

It is dangerous to ascribe malicious intent to simple mistakes.

2

She ascribes the company's downfall to poor leadership.

3

Scholars ascribe the anonymous manuscript to a 17th-century monk.

4

We often ascribe human emotions to our pets.

5

He ascribes his resilience to the hardships he faced in youth.

6

The report ascribes the high inflation to global supply chain issues.

7

Do not ascribe your own fears to others.

8

They ascribe the painting's style to the Renaissance period.

1

The professor ascribes the shift in public opinion to the rise of digital media.

2

One might ascribe a certain level of cynicism to his later works.

3

She ascribes the success of the project to a confluence of fortunate events.

4

Many philosophers ascribe intrinsic value to all living beings.

5

The author ascribes a sense of melancholy to the protagonist throughout the novel.

6

It is common to ascribe divine intervention to unexplained natural events.

7

The study ascribes the increase in productivity to the new workflow.

8

He ascribes his artistic vision to the influence of his travels.

1

The critic ascribes a profound existential dread to the director's early films.

2

Throughout history, societies have ascribed supernatural origins to celestial movements.

3

One must be careful not to ascribe modern values to ancient texts.

4

The theory ascribes the evolution of the species to environmental pressures.

5

He ascribes a hidden agenda to even the most benevolent actions.

6

The essay ascribes a sense of fatalism to the character's final decision.

7

Scholars continue to ascribe new layers of meaning to the classic literature.

8

They ascribe the cultural shift to a fundamental change in societal norms.

Gegenteile

deny disassociate disconnect

Häufige Kollokationen

ascribe to
ascribe meaning to
ascribe motive to
ascribe success to
ascribe importance to
ascribe cause to
falsely ascribe
wrongly ascribe
widely ascribe
commonly ascribe

Idioms & Expressions

"Give credit where credit is due"

Acknowledge someone for their work.

He did the work, so give credit where credit is due.

neutral

"Lay at the door of"

To hold someone responsible for something.

The failure was laid at the door of the manager.

formal

"Pin it on someone"

To blame someone for a mistake.

They tried to pin the theft on him.

casual

"Put it down to"

To attribute an event to a specific cause.

I put it down to the cold weather.

casual

"Point the finger"

To accuse someone of something.

It's easy to point the finger when things go wrong.

neutral

"Take the rap"

To accept blame for something.

He had to take the rap for the team's mistake.

casual

Easily Confused

ascribe vs describe

similar sound

describe is about details; ascribe is about origin

I describe the house; I ascribe its beauty to the architect.

ascribe vs subscribe

similar sound

subscribe is to sign up; ascribe is to attribute

I subscribe to a magazine; I ascribe the success to the team.

ascribe vs prescribe

similar sound

prescribe is for medicine; ascribe is for attribution

The doctor prescribes medicine; I ascribe the illness to a virus.

ascribe vs inscribe

similar sound

inscribe is to write on something; ascribe is to link

I inscribe my name on the book; I ascribe the book to the author.

Sentence Patterns

A1

Subject + ascribe + object + to + source

He ascribes his success to his team.

B2

Passive: Object + be + ascribed + to + source

The painting is ascribed to Picasso.

B1

Adverb + ascribe + object + to + source

They widely ascribe the change to him.

B1

Modals + ascribe + object + to + source

One should ascribe value to time.

C1

Participle phrase + ascribe + object + to + source

Ascribing the issue to heat, they left.

Wortfamilie

Nouns

ascription The act of attributing something.

Verbs

ascribe To attribute.

Adjectives

ascribable Capable of being attributed.

Verwandt

scribe Same root (to write).

How to Use It

frequency

6

Formality Scale

academic/formal neutral not casual not slang

Häufige Fehler

ascribe of ascribe to
The preposition 'of' is incorrect; always use 'to'.
ascribe for ascribe to
You don't ascribe something for something else.
using as a noun use as a verb
Ascribe is a verb. Use 'ascription' for the noun.
missing the object include the object
Ascribe is transitive; it needs an object to work.
confusing with describe check definitions
Describe is to explain details; ascribe is to link to a cause.

Tips

💡

Memory Palace Trick

Visualize a scribe writing a label on a box.

💡

When Native Speakers Use It

When explaining reasons in a report.

🌍

Cultural Insight

Used often in historical analysis.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

Think of it as 'attribute to'.

💡

Say It Right

Rhymes with describe.

💡

Don't Make This Mistake

Don't use 'of' instead of 'to'.

💡

Did You Know?

It shares a root with scripture.

💡

Study Smart

Practice with 'attribute' as a synonym.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

A-SCRIBE: A scribe writes down who did what.

Visual Association

A person writing a name on a scroll next to an event.

Word Web

attribute credit blame cause origin

Herausforderung

Write three sentences about your day using 'ascribe'.

Wortherkunft

Latin

Original meaning: To write to or add to a list.

Kultureller Kontext

None.

Common in academic and formal debate environments.

Used frequently in literary criticism and historical analysis.

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Academic Writing

  • The author ascribes
  • Scholars ascribe
  • It is often ascribed to

Professional Reports

  • Ascribe the decline to
  • Ascribe the growth to
  • Factors ascribed to

Literary Criticism

  • Ascribe a motive to
  • Ascribe a quality to
  • Ascribe meaning to

Historical Analysis

  • Ascribe the event to
  • Ascribe the origin to
  • Commonly ascribed to

Conversation Starters

"To what do you ascribe your success in learning English?"

"Do you think people ascribe too much importance to social media?"

"To whom would you ascribe the most influence in your life?"

"Why do you think people ascribe human qualities to their pets?"

"Can you ascribe a reason for the current weather trends?"

Journal Prompts

Write about a success you had and ascribe it to specific habits.

Describe a mystery and ascribe a possible cause to it.

Reflect on a personality trait you have and ascribe its origin to your childhood.

Discuss a piece of art and ascribe a specific meaning to it.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

8 Fragen

It is similar, but 'blame' is usually negative, while 'ascribe' is neutral.

It might sound a bit formal for a text message.

Ascription.

It is common in writing but less so in casual speech.

Yes, it is almost always followed by 'to'.

You usually ascribe a quality or action to a person, not the person themselves.

No, it follows standard conjugation.

It comes from the Latin 'scribere'.

Teste dich selbst

fill blank A1

I ___ my success to my teacher.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: ascribe

Subject 'I' takes base form.

multiple choice A2

Which means to link a cause to an event?

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: ascribe

Ascribe means to attribute.

true false B1

Ascribe is a noun.

Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort: Falsch

It is a verb.

match pairs B1

Word

Bedeutung

All matched!

Synonyms and roots.

sentence order B2

Tippe auf die Wörter unten, um den Satz zu bilden
Richtig! Nicht ganz. Richtige Antwort:

Subject + verb + object + prep + source.

Ergebnis: /5

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