contumely การใช้
- He likes sulfites and heaps contumely on the super-Tuscans.
- All those years he's had to suffer all my contumely in my head.
- At a time when the Abolitionist met scorn and contumely, he laboured zealously to free the slave.
- Said the stuff she turned in wasn't quality, and otherwise heaped contumely on her authorial reputation.
- The 38th president was the only one not elected, so he might not have been prepared for the contumely that accompanies presidential politics.
- The torso, which had remained unscathed, was burned in the amphitheatre, in a final act of contumely . [ . . .]
- The second count charged that his words were " intended to bring [ those forces ] into contempt, scorn, contumely, and disrepute ".
- User : Fortuna Imperatrix Mundi left a contumely, do not know what its purpose Preceding contribs ) 20 : 22, 8 January 2014 ( UTC)
- Parties are to be measured by the column inches of ritualized contumely printed by newspapers, including this one, tsk-tsking over the frivolity of the privileged classes.
- Instead, he had kept him at the farthest remove possible, in disgrace and contumely, and had suffered him to be held a sort of prisoner in marshy and sickly regions.
- But it is quite another to engage in personal attacks that hold the president up to . . . scorn . . . . Anyone who thinks of himself as a gentleman ought to be above such contumely.
- These days, with its spinoffs and reruns, the show has become something of a joke itself, risking critical contumely and self-parody by spreading like an oil slick into every unoccupied slot on television.
- At age 50, still living his Bronx fantasy of a career on the radio ( he first practiced at a tape recorder as Luke Warm, boy announcer ), Post will not yield to Rush Limbaugh in depth of contumely.
- On the other hand, is that sum to be increased if it should be shewn that the debtor could have paid readily without any embarrassment, but refused with expression of contempt and contumely, from a malicious desire to injure his creditor?
- There is now a more intimate kind of declamation, which must have existed in Dickens'day as well _ a man or woman pouring words of bitterness or counsel, warning or contumely, into the ears of a rapt or fearful or dismissive listener.
- To be a true " lover of God, " however, means " to receive offense, and resent not; to hear words of contumely, and answer not; to act merely from love, and rejoice even in trials as tests of pure love " ( Shab . 88b; Somah 31a; comp.
- And here comes Hamlet to bestride the stage, in the soliloquy that begins " To be, or not to be, " listing the burdens of life : " For who would bear the whips and scorns of time, / Th'oppressor's wrong, the proud man's contumely ."
- After shutting him up in a secret chamber, where they fed him on milk and other childish food, they sent to almost all The cities of England in which there were Jews, and summoned some of their sect from each city to be present at a sacrifice to take place at Lincoln, in contumely and insult of Jesus Christ.
- Keating had previously paid public tribute to McGuinness for contributing to his economic education, but, after McGuinness become a frequent critic of Keating's government and persona, Keating described him as " a bloated cane toad ", and predicted that " the quality of the Australian press will rise simply because his vituperation and contumely will have been excised from it ."
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