Use "disparaging" in a sentence

1. It's disparaging, disrespectful.

2. disparaging terms for small people.

3. Belittling definition is - expressing disparagement : disparaging, depreciatory

4. Used as a disparaging term for a Jew.

5. Used as a disparaging term for a woman.

6. Buckra (n.) disparaging term among Caribbean and Southern U.S

7. Bashing: Speaking or referring to another in a disparaging fashion.

8. She made several disparaging remarks about the manager she dislikes.

9. Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for a woman.

10. Chinaman: Used as a disparaging term for a Chinese man.

11. Even with favorable items they would usually add some disparaging comments.

12. This humble approach will prevent us from disparaging the customs of others.

13. Halliday's comments grew daily more and more sparklingly disagreeable and disparaging.

14. Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for a heterosexual person.

15. 'It Corroborates': Chuck Hagel Explains Why Reports Of Trump Disparaging Veterans Are True

16. Bish is a form of bitch, a disparaging, offensive slur for a woman

17. Used as a disparaging term for a Native american or Black man.

18. He was critical of the people[Sentencedict.com ], disparaging of their crude manners.

19. The disparaging rant I wrote contained no less than two spelling mistakes.

20. Antonyms for Blandishing include disparaging, unflattering, discouraging, dissuading, repelling, repulsing and turning off

21. Bumpkin is a disparaging term for someone who's unsophisticated and lacks social grace

22. Dan Snyder, Assailing ‘disparaging’ Post story, wins search into Scot McCloughan’s wife’s phone

23. Arrogance, on the other hand, is manifested in interper-sonal contexts by disparaging others

24. Bohunk is a disparaging term given to certain Eastern Europeans, ranging from Hungarians to Ukrainians

25. A disparaging or malicious remark; slanderous accusation (esp in the phrase cast Aspersions (on)) 2.

26. Antonyms for Adulatory include disparaging, unflattering, contemptuous, slighting, derogatory, scornful, belittling, critical, deprecatory and insulting

27. Who of us has never felt the sting of a thoughtless or even disparaging remark?

28. She always chose that moment to talk about Durkin, and always in a disparaging way.

29. Adjective distrusting or disparaging the motives of others; like or characteristic of a Cynic

30. Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for a Latin American, especially a Mexican.

31. Synonyms for Bitching include critical, censorious, condemnatory, condemning, castigatory, reproving, denunciatory, deprecatory, disparaging and disapproving

32. 1. a disparaging or malicious remark; slanderous accusation (esp in the phrase cast Aspersions (on)) 2

33. Through the disparaging comparison pointing at the inferiority of other humans, Animalization fulfils a major function

34. Synonyms for Contemptuous include disdainful, scornful, disparaging, derogatory, slighting, arrogant, denigratory, haughty, belittling and supercilious

35. Synonyms for Criticizing include critical, censorious, condemnatory, condemning, castigatory, reproving, denunciatory, deprecatory, disparaging and disapproving

36. Synonyms for Bellyaching include critical, censorious, condemnatory, condemning, castigatory, reproving, denunciatory, deprecatory, disparaging and disapproving

37. A disparaging or malicious remark; slanderous accusation (esp in the phrase cast Aspersions (on)) 2

38. Savitt said that at the time of the arrest, Hauser made disparaging remarks against minorities.

39. The Minister was alleged to have made disparaging remarks about the rest of the Cabinet.

40. Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for an Italian or a person of Italian descent.

41. I don't know why, but O. B a way of disparaging me even while laudatory phrases.

42. Used as a disparaging term for an effeminate man , especially a gay or homosexual man.

43. Speaker, Don Cherry's disparaging remarks about Quebeckers on the CBC speak volumes about that gentleman's narrow-mindedness

44. Whichever age-group we belong to, we will encounter people who make disparaging remarks about our beliefs.

45. Rather than disparaging the familiarity of such stories, we should celebrate the fact these great men exist.

46. And villagers walking past gave the gathering a wide berth, and spat in disgust with disparaging comments.

47. Synonyms for Captious include critical, carping, cavilling, fault-finding, hypercritical, censorious, deprecating, disparaging, nagging and overcritical

48. Even those who do not condemn democracy out of hand have often contrived more subtle ways of disparaging it.

49. Chad is a usually disparaging internet slang term used for a popular, confident, sexually active young white male

50. Ab·os or ab·os Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for an Australian Aborigine

51. They were no better than Huns, guilty of “Anglo-Bochism” (boche being a disparaging term for a German soldier)

52. Other cartoons are lifeless; plenty of sitcoms offer droll toddlers and clever menials, bringing down their betters with disparaging asides.

53. Gradually, the term "Apocrypha" took on a disparaging connotation, since the orthodoxy of these hidden books was often questionable.

54. 4 Avoid Arrogance: Our knowledge of the Bible provides no basis for looking down on people or referring to them in disparaging terms.

55. (Proverbs 12:18; 18:21) Harsh words, disparaging remarks, and biting sarcasm have no place among Christians, who are sensitive to the feelings of other people.

56. Short of money, back on the defense for disparaging the military, responsible for Bollixing up the response to the pandemic that has killed 186,000 people and desperate to …

57. An Aspersion is a disparaging remark. It almost invariably appears as a plural, following the word "cast" — when you cast Aspersions on someone, you are questioning their abilities or doubting them

58. Usage note for Brier This term is usually used with disparaging intent to refer to those white people who migrated north and west from Southern Appalachia throughout the first half of the 20th century

59. An aspersion is a disparaging remark. It almost invariably appears as a plural, following the word "cast" — when you cast Aspersions on someone, you are questioning their abilities or doubting them

60. The words commonly used to describe egotistical individuals are extremely disparaging; we call them arrogant, haughty, big-headed, vain, conceited, stuck-up, or pretentious, and brand them Blowhards, show-offs, snobs, narcissists, pompous asses, or worse.

61. The act of sprinkling water in baptism (rare) an abusive attack on a person's character or good name ; a disparaging remark; "in the 19th century any reference to female sexuality was considered a vile Aspersion"; "it is difficult for a woman …

62. Bait and switch A deceptive sales technique that involves advertising a low-priced item to attract customers to a store, then persuading them to buy more expensive goods by failing to have a sufficient supply of the advertised item on hand or by disparaging its quality

63. I can imagine the order ringing out from below: "Christian without prayer or preparation reading the Bible — send out the Befuddlers!" They were to build on my folly by speaking a disparaging word or two to tell me that it was all a waste of my time.

64. The term Ashcan School was suggested by a drawing by Bellows captioned Disappointments of the Ash Can, which appeared in the Philadelphia Record in April 1915; was invoked by cartoonist Art Young in a disparaging critique that appeared in the New York Sun in April 1916; and was given curatorial currency by Holger Cahill and Alfred H

65. [2] Contrary to a view that occasionally imputes this kind of naïve freedom propaganda to poststructuralist authors such as Deleuze and Guattari, disparaging them as anarchist aging hippies, with a little good will one can read from Deleuze and Guattari that they unequivocally identify the pole of movement and organization/institution and set it in a relation: in "Thousand Plateaus" Deleuze and Guattari not only hallucinate - as has often been imputed - hybrid streams of deterritorialization, but also describe a permanent connection between deterritorialization and reterritorialization.