disparagingly in English

adverb

scornfully, in a belittling manner, slanderously

Use "disparagingly" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "disparagingly" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "disparagingly", or refer to the context using the word "disparagingly" in the English Dictionary.

1. Cynically: as in disparagingly, negatively

2. Other youths may talk disparagingly of their parents.

3. But what if we were to speak disparagingly of these?

4. Synonyms for Captiously include critically, carpingly, hypercritically, censoriously, deprecatingly, disparagingly, naggingly, overcritically, nigglingly and

5. In this they mirror the modern hostility to what is disparagingly called “organized religion.”

6. Tacitus wrote disparagingly of the beer brewed by the Germanic peoples of his day.

7. The same dictionary defines “ism” as “a distinctive doctrine, cause, system, or theory —often used disparagingly.”

8. Do you become vindictive if someone ignores you or speaks disparagingly about you to others?

9. The seventeenth century was very much the age of what Milton had termed disparagingly ‘Aphorismers and Politicasters’

10. The name for the letter H, often used disparagingly in such expressions as an aitchdropper, aitch-free, and Aitchless

11. The service at the graveside was held by Rabbi Dr Norman Solomon, who said, disparagingly, that Epstein was "a symbol of the malaise of our generation".

12. Aphorism and the counsel of prudence in early modern statecraft: the curious case of Justus Lipsius The seventeenth century was very much the age of what Milton had termed disparagingly 'Aphorismers and Politicasters '

13. The seventeenth century was very much the age of what Milton had termed disparagingly 'Aphorismers and Politicasters'. Jones's essay examines the character of Lipsius's advice, the genre in which it was presented, and what it entailed for the politics of prudence he espoused.

14. Enemies of Edmund Campion (1540-1581) disparagingly referred to his apologia as "Campion's Brag," the title by which his "Challenge to the Privy Council" is most commonly known today.It is perhaps the earliest defense of the faith to appear in English during the Reformation.

15. SYNONYMY NOTE: Aesthete, although applied to one highly sensitive to art and beauty, is often used derogatorily to connote effeteness or decadence; , dilettante refers to one who appreciates art as distinguished from one who creates it, but is used disparagingly of one who dabbles superficially in the arts; a , connoisseur is one who has expert knowledge or a keen discrimination in matters of