opprobrious การใช้
- Certainly, Nicklaus'was the more opprobrious, given his history and stature.
- That use was taken over into Christianity and Islam, sometimes under the opprobrious form Beelzebub in demonology.
- :: I find Mel's incredible assumptions of bad faith and opprobrious allegations to be rather sad.
- Bridget Bishop, also one of those hanged, had been punished 15 years before for " calling her husband many opprobrious names ."
- The Princess refused to visit or acknowledge Jahandar's new favourite, who in her rage loaded the royal lady with the most opprobrious epithets.
- There are no known specific instances of abuse by the Harrisons of their slaves, beyond the opprobrious conduct inherent in their claim to ownership of them.
- The other four, including Schubert, were " severely reprimanded ", in part for " inveighing against [ officials ] with insulting and opprobrious language ".
- His most opprobrious utterance is to call a wave a " freak, " which reflects nothing more than his understanding of the probabilities governing wave height.
- The bull of Gregory XI impressed upon them the name of Lollards, intended as an opprobrious epithet, but it became, to them, a name of honour.
- The words " Tory " and " Whig " entered the language as highly opprobrious slurs, but were later adopted by the parties to which they referred.
- The name " Roman Catholic Church " is occasionally used by popes, bishops, other clergy and laity, who do not see it as opprobrious or having the suggested overtone.
- In 1649 the Act of Toleration was passed, where " blasphemy and the calling of opprobrious religious names " became punishable offenses, but it was repealed in 1654 and thus Catholics were outlawed once again.
- It was said that Father Gallitzin would chastise any person who would call the town by that opprobrious name and he declared that it should be known as Jefferson . . . " in honor of our third President.
- Had they proceeded on our part from a restless levity of temper, unjust impulses of ambition, or artful suggestions of seditious persons, we should merit the opprobrious terms frequently bestowed upon us by those we revere.
- Baker was dismissed from the Academy in Fall 1875 for using " opprobrious language " during a mess hall fight; the harassment continued after his reinstatement by Secretary of the Navy George M . Robeson, however, and Baker resigned permanently.
- As a result, almost all the Catholic Indo-Europeans and Indians with pretensions to respectability flocked to the vicars Apostolic, until in the end it was deemed opprobrious to term one as belonging to the Diocese of Saint Thomas of Mylapur.
- Occasionally, the term " faction " is still used more or less as a synonym for political party, but " with opprobrious sense, conveying the imputation of selfish or mischievous ends or turbulent or unscrupulous methods ", according to the Oxford English Dictionary.
- This was proved by affixing to Oswald the opprobrious epithet of'cop-killer .'" Jim Garrison alleged that evidence was altered to frame Oswald, stating : " If Oswald was innocent of the Tippit murder the foundation of the government's case against him collapsed ."
- Weber saw the bureaucracy as a relatively positive development; however by 1944, the Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises noted that the term bureaucracy was " always applied with an opprobrious connotation, " and by 1957 the American sociologist Robert Merton noted that the term " bureaucrat " had become an epithet.
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