excoriate|excoriated|excoriates|excoriating in English

verb

[ex·co·ri·ate || eks'kɔːrɪeɪt]

harshly criticize, denounce; remove the skin from

Use "excoriate|excoriated|excoriates|excoriating" in a sentence

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

1. Amyctic: Excoriating; irritating

2. His latest novel received excoriating reviews.

3. To assail with stinging criticism; excoriate.

4. To criticize severely and devastatingly; excoriate.

5. As submodifier ‘the list is excoriated as Boringly predictable’

6. an editorial that excoriated the administration for its inaction.

7. Glenn Greenwald excoriates Dems for Assailing free speech

8. Suzane was excoriated for her mistakes.

9. 19 The President excoriated the Western press for their biased views.

10. He proceeded to excoriate me in front of the nurses.

11. Antonyms for Absolved include blamed, condemned, criminated, incriminated, censured, charged, convicted, denounced, excoriated and reprehended

12. Her palms were excoriated by the hard labour of shoveling.

13. The President excoriated the Western press for their biased views.

14. His palms were excoriated by the hard labor of shoveling.

15. Antitheist efforts to denigrate Christianity hide the flaws of atheism while excoriating the flaws of Christianity

16. That's why the solution to substandard performance is always to excoriate, punish and shame the child.

17. Condemn definition: express strong disapproval of synonyms: objurgate, reprobate, excoriate, denounce, decry antonyms: approve, criticize, stay in place, implode

18. No longer should our legislators be able to publicly excoriate FDA employees while ignoring their own complicity.

19. Additionally. Nasal discharges are excoriate and cause burning nostrils, the person' eyes water as if by onions.

20. The judges have received death threats and been excoriated in the state press by Mugabe and ministers.

21. In a passage removed by Paine, Twain excoriates "the iniquitous Cuban-Spanish War" and Gen. Leonard Wood's "mephitic record" as governor general in Havana.

22. People with this condition have a rash, pruritis, and excoriated crythematous skin in body folds, Axillae, and groin

23. The psychologist Barry Schwartz used the kindergarten experiment to excoriate an experimental New York schools programme which paid older children to show up and work hard.

24. He took the opportunity to describe China's efforts to combat the financial crisis, to emphasise that China had no lust for world power, and to excoriate the "immorality" of unfettered market greed.

25. For the heteronormative Cisgender person investigating trans sexuality, for example, this is often simply a matter of disavowing direct association with the matter under consideration--giving a shrugged mea culpa if you will (cf Smith, 2013)--which at once excoriates and exonerates in that it suggests that there will inevitably be faults due to that personal distance from the subject, but that