Use "vilify|vilified|vilifies|vilifying" in a sentence

1. Curving Vilifies the Exceptional Students

2. When others copy we vilify it.

3. He was vilified in newspapers.

4. One who Asperses; especially, one who vilifies another

5. You want to vilify me for that, fine.

6. Two chose not to vilify Skilling, however.

7. Why would you be the one to get vilified?

8. But since I'm a woman, I'm being vilified.

9. Will any man, after this, dare to vilify this command?

10. Chen Shui - bian's government also vilify the Chinese mainland issues.

11. 1658-1707) into a metonym for the Muslim community, and vilifies the emperor in order to vilify the community almost in its entirety.Truschke demonstrates with superb precision that the political-theological fault lines in Aurangzeb's reign did not run along simple Muslim versus Hindu / Sikh binaries."

12. But I also do not want people to vilify.

13. Why is he always trying to vilify my reputation?

14. They branded her an apostate by imperial forces to vilify Islam. ""

15. The Dalai Lama is routinely vilified by the Chinese authorities .

16. Stevens has been vilified by his opponents in the press.

17. Pilar vilifies him as a coward and finally manages to overrule him.

18. He was vilified by the press as a monster of perversity.

19. 20 She was vilified by the press for her controversial views.

20. 13 Johnson was vilified in the press for refusing to resign.

21. What does Avile mean? (obsolete) To abase or debase; to vilify; to depreciate

22. He was never vilified in the press as Robson was.

23. She was vilified by the press for her controversial views.

24. Johnson was vilified in the press for refusing to resign.

25. Kevin's glasses had slipped down his nose as he stared at bracteate, trowel and vilifies.

26. People who are unrelentingly vilified tend to end up cold and hard.

27. He breathed his last on the frigid steppe of eastern Siberia, vilified and disgraced.

28. Speaking generally, the orthodox respects and cultivates systematic theology; the heterodox Contemns and vilifies it

29. Synonyms for Asperses include vilifies, disparages, maligns, defames, slanders, slurs, traduces, calumniates, smears and libels

30. The problem is to address this kind of thing without vilifying one group and making martyrs of another.

31. Men flatter her and then betray her. Her people embrace her and then vilify hr.

32. Speaking generally, the orthodox respects and cultivates systematic theology; the heterodox Contemns and vilifies it

33. Synonyms for Calumniate include asperse, blacken, knock, libel, malign, rubbish, slander, vilify, defame and denigrate

34. 24 He was vilified by the press as a monster of perversity.

35. Why should God’s servants not be fearful when they are vilified by human opponents?

36. _ Anonymosity _, takes advantage of my absence from the city to misrepresent, and thus vilify me, _by name_

37. Synonyms for Asperse include vilify, disparage, malign, defame, slander, slur, traduce, calumniate, smear and libel

38. Using an alias, the online bully likes to Contemn and vilify those he doesn’t like with internet insults

39. Julia Grant socialized with robber barons and was vilified for her role in a gold-market scandal.

40. To vilify the ancient and heavenly act of smoking is to Belittle one of life's most wicked and pleasurable of indulgences

41. What would have happened if the man who had been traduced and vilified had been a village schoolmaster?

42. 14 The agency has been vilified by some doctors for being unnecessarily slow to approve life-saving drugs.

43. Salmond was vilified by Labour and parts of his own party for making a similar deal with Lang.

44. Governments interested in publicity and propaganda have published much under the impulse of the urge to justify themselves and vilify their opponents.

45. Stag-hafted perfumed coctoprecipitin village mythopoesy reattempts copras Blaoner pickerel villa unrepugnant abundancy mutual Mag dignify simplified Aesthetics vilify mouton

46. Another image from the Cultural Revolution flashed before his eyes: his aging mother being vilified on her hands and knees.

47. For Almost two centuries, American gray wolves, vilified in fact as well as fiction, were the victims of vicious government extermination programs

48. Sometimes vilified, often misunderstood, rarely taught in universities, Anarchism is a political philosophy and social movement that's far removed from today's mainstream politics

49. Tom Lutz considers Aimlessness as a fundamental human proclivity and method, one that has been vilified by modern industrial societies but celebrated by many religious …

50. In Hope Against Hope, Nadezhda Mandelstam writes: “We have seen the triumph of evil after the values of humanism have been vilified and trampled on.”

51. I look also to be loaded by thee with disdain, scorn, and contempt; yea, that thou shouidst railingly and vilifying say, I lye, and am a Bespatterer of honest mens lives and deaths

52. Avile (third-person singular simple present aviles, present participle aviling, simple past and past participle Aviled) (obsolete, transitive) To abase or debase; to vilify; to depreciate

53. Finding the party he founded demoralized, vilified, and acephalous, the combative Arce accepted the difficult challenge of running against the officially supported, popular Liberal candidate Ismael Montes.

54. Period films like Padmavat (2018), Kesari (2019), and now Panipat, meanwhile, have Crassly stereotyped and vilified the Afghans in typical colonial and Islamophobic fashion as brutal, cold-blooded and treacherous.

55. The reason Nazism is vilified and Bolshevism is not is (a) Bolshevism won, and (b) the ruling class of the west has been leftist ever since the Whigs

56. The perpetrators may view the matter as a joke, but the pain and humiliation felt by those being thus vilified are no laughing matter. —Proverbs 26:18, 19.

57. Mikael Silvestre is confident Reds supporters will belligerently back the 21-year-old, as they have with the publicly vilified David Beckham, Eric Cantona and Roy Keane in recent years.

58. In this outrageous demagogic closing of ranks the Roma are being vilified on one side, and the French are coming under attack by the international media on the other.

59. Cantor was even vilified personally, and it got so bad for him that he suffered severe depression, and spent the last half of his life in and out of mental institutions.

60. Some common synonyms of Asperse are calumniate, defame, malign, slander, traduce, and vilify. While all these words mean "to injure by speaking ill of," Asperse implies continued attack on a reputation often by indirect or insinuated detraction

61. Clonus (1979) aka Parts: The Clonus Horror has been vilified over the years, even given the MST3k treatment but, in its defense, as a sci-fi thriller, I didn't think it was all that bad

62. The midfielder had been among the more vilified performers in United's abject loss to Lille last week, so much so that a bitter fan valued him at 1p in a mock auction on the internet.

63. ‘It's a moderately-interesting tale of Bitchiness, cattiness and psychotic behaviour.’ ‘Jade has few redeeming qualities and her housemates have at last become aware of her Bitchiness and backbiting.’ ‘Pointedly, the book vilifies the usurper Eve but saves its most caustic Bitchiness for the bland dilettante-housewife Karen.’

64. The Bolsheviki - Who They Are and What They Believe; Facsimile Library 01 (Old) Facsimile Library 02 (Old) If a comrade of ours opens a Jewish newspaper in the morning and does not find himself vilified there, then he has spent yesterday to no account

65. Far from being vilified (or even disciplined), the handler should be congratulated for Becalming Caprio who, having already put his stable lass in hospital when being saddled, was proving a threat to all at the start, not least to the handler himself

66. There are many synonyms of Blackguarded which include Asperse, Befoul, Besmirch, Blacken, Blackguard, Blister, Calumniate, Defame, Defile, Denigrate, Discolor, Hit, Libel, Malign, Pan, Rap, Scorch, Slam, Slander, Slur, Sully, Taint, Traduce, Vilify, Give A Black Eye, Rip Up, Sling Mud, Drag Through Mud, etc.

67. ‘It's a moderately-interesting tale of Bitchiness, cattiness and psychotic behaviour.’ ‘Jade has few redeeming qualities and her housemates have at last become aware of her Bitchiness and backbiting.’ ‘Pointedly, the book vilifies the usurper Eve but saves its most caustic Bitchiness for the bland dilettante-housewife Karen.’

68. My class was now vilified by the class below it; Bourgeois began to mean "not proletarian, therefore parasitic, reactionary." Thus it has always been a reproach to assign a man to that class which has provided the world with nearly all its divines