accuse, badge of infamy, bring home to, criminate, decrial, excommunication, implication, literary criticism, rebuke, sentence, stigmatize
Definitionn. harsh criticism or disapproval
Last update: May 8, 2017
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Celebrities are often censured by the public. [noun]
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The celebrities become victims of publlic censure. [noun]
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The people who wrote the Bill of Rights censured the very notion of censorship [Please select]
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The final vote on the censure motion takes place next month. [Please select]
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But the ruling community deserves a censure more severe than that directed against the ruled. [verb]
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The old gentleman, apparently conscious of his own want of punctuality, did not at first feel courageous enough to censure that of the coachman. [Please select]
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And this mild censure the brother and sister justly accounted a full pardon for Juno's offences, and sate down well pleased to the morning meal. [Please select]
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Ought he to censure her severely, if, submitting to dissimulation for his sake, she had permitted the young nobleman to entertain hopes which she had no intention to realize. [Please select]
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Many of my honored critics have censured these scenes; others, among whom are some whose opinion I specially value, have lavished the kindest praise upon them. [Please select]
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Cuddie Headrigg and Jenny Dennison suffice as answers to this censure. [Please select]
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There seemed at first something harsh in his strong expressions of dislike and censure, although no one was in the general case more open to conviction. [Please select]
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