The old Don Luis shows his whitened locks, scorned by his hypocritically impious son. They scorned the idea of making bunks, as smacking too much of civilization, and at night slept on boughs covered with blankets. I scorned a reply, and we went around to the shed where all my belongings were stored, still unpacked. New Word List Word List. Even more incongruously it had made him a figure to be courted, albeit not always with great appetite, by the cultural and artistic intelligentsia that had heretofore scorned him.
Really, they were little better than the meridian of the earth, which he had just scorned, because the solid theoretical explanation of invariance was still lacking. Now she regrets her pride because she fears that her true lover has found another sweetheart and that it will be her turn to be scorned. She scorned the possibility that these virtues were exploited as a form of social control, and saw hypocrisy as in essence ethical, upholding standards whatever one's personal failures. He would have scorned to destroy fish with poison or explosives.
From the Hansard archive. Example from the Hansard archive. Contains Parliamentary information licensed under the Open Parliament Licence v3. Civil liberties, trade union freedom and the freedom of expression continue to be scorned. From Europarl Parallel Corpus - English.
The conservatives have scorned this as being what they call a watered-down version of the traditional concept of civil human rights. I come to another more general thing which scorns to be occurring.
The best way to deal with that challenge is not by scorning people but by helping them. We scorned them because they did not have the skills that we thought that we had. We were scorned when we said that ways could be found of choosing the infrastructure in which investment could be placed without increasing inflation. I think these things ought to be said, since this enterprise is now being scorned and ridiculed and its essential service belittled. Click on the arrows to change the translation direction.
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Word Lists. Choose your language. My word lists. Tell us about this example sentence:. The word in the example sentence does not match the entry word. The sentence contains offensive content. Cancel Submit. Save Word. Essential Meaning of scorn. They treated his suggestion with scorn. Full Definition of scorn Entry 1 of 2.
Definition of scorn Entry 2 of 2. Other Words from scorn Verb scorner noun. Choose the Right Synonym for scorn Verb despise , contemn , scorn , disdain mean to regard as unworthy of one's notice or consideration. Examples of scorn in a Sentence Noun Unlike government censorship, this corruption eats at one of China's more beleaguered professions from within its ranks.
The trading of favors for cash is so prevalent that, like the honest cop in a corrupt police unit, an ethical journalist risks the scorn of colleagues. Epstein , Forbes , 21 July He burns with generous indignation at the scorn with which many literary critics have treated Tolkien, and his subtitle, "author of the Century," is meant to provoke.
But provocation is only one of his purposes. Verb My parents scorned packaged and ready-made foods.
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