vilification in English

noun
1
abusively disparaging speech or writing.
the vilification of minority groupings

Use "vilification" in a sentence

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

1. 4 They pelted him with ridicule and vilification.

2. 33 synonyms for Aspersion: slander, abuse, smear, censure, slur, reproach, defamation, vilification

3. 2 Each pledged to desist from slander, vilification and acts of sabotage.

4. 1 Clare did not deserve the vilification she had been subjected to.

5. Another word for Abusiveness: insults, rudeness, vilification, invective, vitriol Collins English Thesaurus

6. 21 Each pledged to desist from slander,(www.Sentencedict.com) vilification and acts of sabotage.

7. 6 And if he does, is it solely for the purposes of vilification?

8. 3 But the Jezebel poems went far beyond vilification of Elizabeth.

9. 10 Corporate America and Wall Street have responded to the public vilification with indignation and surprise.

10. 8 Bishop's letter was the signal for a campaign of vilification and intimidation unequaled in American history.

11. 5 Despite online vilification and real - life harassment,(www.Sentencedict.com) he is trying to sue internet sites for defamation.

12. Synonyms for Belittlings include criticism, denigrations, derision, disparagement, mockings, ridicule, scorn, vilification, derogations and diminishments

13. Synonyms for Aspersing include defamation, libel, slander, calumny, vilification, calumniation, libeling, libelling, maligning and smearing

14. 9 S. Middle East peace effort ran into the buzz saw of Hamas-Fatah internecine strife combined with a Palestinian inability to abandon the narrative of victimhood and vilification of Israel.

15. Backbiting noun slander, abuse, spite, gossip, smearing, malice, maligning, defamation, vilification, denigration, bitchiness (slang), calumny, disparagement, muckraking, vituperation, spitefulness, cattiness (informal), scandalmongering, detraction, calumniation Corporate Backbiting is nothing new.

16. Defamation (also known as Calumny, vilification, libel, slander or traducement) is the oral or written communication of a false statement about another that unjustly harms their reputation and usually constitutes a tort or crime

17. 7 The U.S. Middle East peace effort ran into the buzz saw of Hamas-Fatah internecine strife combined with a Palestinian inability to abandon the narrative of victimhood and vilification of Israel.

18. It has no actual meaning,as it was just supposed to sound Swedish-like and nothing else, but in dictionary meaning, Bork is to obstruct (someone, especially a candidate for public office) through systematic defamation or vilification

19. Grist to the mill of the campaign of terror and vilification of ethnic Albanian extremist terrorists against the Serbs, it also served to destroy the few remaining vestiges of confidence of Serbs and other non-Albanians in Kouchner’s justice.

20. : to attack or defeat (a nominee or candidate for public office) unfairly through an organized campaign of harsh public criticism or vilification In any event, seeing one of their own being Borked may itself energize the conservative base, even beyond what a conservative nomination would do.

21. As it is parachuted.Saf > t wrench is Barricadoed from blackout which backlogs from boletus unstoppered heartening blinking in the nurture in versification, in the endoscope of vilification, in methanal, and square.If you compensate assent to saf t wrench cadaverous you will agree that the counterirritant is modelled totally the transvestite of a slider.To flunk the saf t wrench it is trigger

22. Although it can not be stated categorically that the term negri is, in itself, derogatory as used in the Icelandic language, the Court holds, viewing the newspaper interview in its entirety and assessing the defendant’s expressions in that context, that they seek, by mockery, vilification and belittlement, to aggrandise persons of the white race at the expense of persons of other skin colour.

23. Although it can not be stated categorically that the term negri is, in itself, derogatory as used in the Icelandic language, the Court holds, viewing the newspaper interview in its entirety and assessing the defendant's expressions in that context, that they seek, by mockery, vilification and belittlement, to aggrandise persons of the white race at the expense of persons of other skin colour