Đặt câu với từ "pejorative"

1. The new terminology will quickly become pejorative.

2. Commie: [noun] pejorative term for a Communist

3. Cult is often associated with pejorative and negative connotations.

4. Used to modify pejorative nouns: an Abject failure

5. What does Anecdata mean? (usually humorous or pejorative) Anecdotal evidence

6. Isn't there a suggestion that "poetess" is slightly pejorative?

7. The term hyper-Calvinist is often used as a pejorative

8. I'm using the word 'academic' here in a pejorative sense.

9. The psychiatric model added other, more pejorative, associations with overweight.

10. ' Swot 'is a pejorative term for someone who studies a lot.

11. What does Chauvinistic mean? (pejorative) Of or pertaining to chauvinism or chauvinists

12. Bowdlerization, although a pejorative term, can have both good and bad results

13. Make sure students realise that 'fat' is an unflattering or pejorative word.Sentencedict.com

14. And so it acquired its contemporary, pejorative connotation of idle chatter.

15. Make sure students realise that 'fat' is an unflattering or pejorative word.

16. The class distinctions we employ, you would maintain, are descriptive not pejorative.

17. Vegetal Tasting term used to describe a vegetable like aroma. Usually pejorative.

18. I agree I am ambitious, and I don't see that as a pejorative term.

19. The term "kathoey" may be considered pejorative, especially in the form "kathoey-saloey".

20. Soldiers invent "mildly pejorative terms" to help them blow off steam, Adams says.

21. Appeasement is a pejorative phrase because of the association with appeasing Hitler in the 1930s

22. “Ballot harvesting” is a pejorative term for the third-party collection of mail-in Ballots

23. For Trotskyists and other revolutionary Marxists, the term Centrist in this sense has a pejorative association

24. I was, and this is the most pejorative label in all of caddying, a bag carrier.

25. (pejorative) ¿Qué te parecen los del Partido Amarillo? - Me parecen una pandilla de Charlatanes.

26. Corpulent: ( ō-bēs' ), Negative or pejorative connotations of this word may render it offensive in some contexts

27. In italian, a cariatide Caryatid is also a pejorative noun for an old, backward-looking person (e.g

28. He used the word 'girl' in the pejorative sense when referring to the women who worked for him.

29. Early nineteenth century Chinese workers in the United States were called “Coolies,” which soon acquired a pejorative connotation.

30. Bitch (/ b ɪ t ʃ / bich) is a pejorative slang word for a person, usually a woman

31. Bankster is of course pejorative, implying that the person described makes money through illegal or unethical tactics

32. While ' Birdbrain ' has long been a pejorative term used to insult someone's intelligence, rooks are considered particularly smart

33. Bourgie meaning (usually pejorative) Used to describe middle-class values in their attempt to give the semblance of discerning taste

34. Barbarians Barbarian (Greek βάρβαρος ): Greek and Roman expression, often pejorative, to indicate the nations they perceived as wild and uncivilized

35. Crank is a pejorative term used for a person who holds an unshakable belief that most of their contemporaries consider to be false

36. However, we should be wary lest use of such an emotive and pejorative term leads to premature dismissal of legitimate arguments.

37. I’ve often wondered how the name of a waterbird — the American coot — became the pejorative “old coot” for a Crotchety old man

38. Bodice ripper is a pejorative term for romance in general that has been recycled to refer to a specific sub-genre of historical romance

39. It comes as quite a shock to still hear a judge describing a child as 'illegitimate', with all the pejorative overtones of that word.

40. Professor Lockwood said it was a "pejorative name" because what happened during the Maunder Minimum "was actually nothing like an ice age at all".

41. By the time Hitler was dead and the Cold War underway, the word had lost its Godly associations and became a pejorative, Connoting mostly the …

42. The author acknowledges that Cynicism can uncover "oppression, dishonesty, hypocrisy, cruelty, and injustice." Yet for the author, "Cynicism" is a pejorative term.

43. Brogrammer Pejorative adjective for computer programmers or others with a technical skill-set that adhere to a "bro" or "cool" culture, often obnoxiously so.

44. 'Carpetbaggers? was a pejorative term referring to northerners who went south by the thousands, carrying their personal goods in luggage fashioned from carpets, after the American Civil War.

45. The term was applied to various peoples who had not converted to Islam at the time of colonization and was a pejorative, although some writers have reappropriated it.

46. "Bohemian" was originally a term with pejorative undertones given to Roma gypsies, commonly believed by the French to have originated in Bohemia, in central Europe.

47. From Middle English Coward, from Old French coart, cuard (> French couard), from coue (“tail”), coe + -ard (pejorative agent noun suffix); coue, coe is in turn from Latin cauda

48. As verbs the difference between blather and Blither is that blather is (pejorative) to talk rapidly without making much sense while Blither is to talk foolishly; to blather

49. Note: Cantankerous is generally used to describe an unpleasant elderly person in a slightly pejorative manner. However, the term can be used to people in general, livestock, and machinery as well.

50. The term carpetbagger, used exclusively as a pejorative term, originated from the Carpet bags (a form of cheap luggage made from carpet fabric) which many of these newcomers carried

51. Principal Translations: Inglés: Español: Chugger n noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc.: slang, pejorative (charity worker): persona que pide donaciones o suscripciones en la calle grupo nom

52. As an Appellative or a pejorative, it is a term that was used quite widely; in fact, we can trace the term back almost a thousand years before the time of Moses

53. Other articles where Bowdlerize is discussed: Thomas Bowdler: The word Bowdlerize, current by 1838 as a synonym for expurgate and now used in a pejorative sense, remains his most lasting memorial.

54. Bourgeoisie, in todays terms, means middle-class, and is usually used as a pejorative term for the materialistic, rather affluent, conventional-minded part of society that "feels" on the upper levels

55. Bourgeois Bourgeoisie, in todays terms, means middle-class, and is usually used as a pejorative term for the materialistic, rather affluent, conventional-minded part of society that "feels" on the upper levels.

56. Bratty adj adjective: Describes a noun or pronoun--for example, "a tall girl," "an interesting book," "a big house." informal, pejorative (child: badly behaved) mocoso, mimado/a adj adjetivo : …

57. At the bottom of the white ranks came the so-called "poor whites," often given such pejorative names as "red legs" in Barbados, or "walking Buckras" in Jamaica

58. [Japanese boke, blur, blurring (as a technique of traditional Japanese ink wash painting), verbal noun of Bokeru, to be senile or muddle-headed, be hazy or blurry, fade, from alteration (with pejorative voiced b for voiceless h

59. Apostolici Apostolici is a term applied at various times, generally in a pejorative sense, to reformers wishing to return to the primitive Church, poor, humble, simple, and penitential, through close imitation of the Apostles

60. Alternative etymology derives Middle English beggere, Beggare, beggar from Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, a lay brotherhood of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert (“mendicant”), with pejorative suffix (see -ard : 4

61. [Japanese boke, blur, blurring (as a technique of traditional Japanese ink wash painting), verbal noun of Bokeru, to be senile or muddle-headed, be hazy or blurry, fade, from alteration (with pejorative voiced b for voiceless h

62. Afar, Amharic Adal, Arabic Danakil (singular; now pejorative), a people of the Horn of Africa who speak Afar (also known as ’Afar Af), a language of the Eastern Cushitic branch of the Afro-Asiatic language family

63. Coolie, (from Hindi Kuli, an aboriginal tribal name, or from Tamil kuli, “wages”), in usually pejorative European usage, an unskilled labourer or porter usually in or from the Far East hired for low or subsistence wages

64. Alternative etymology derives Middle English beggere, Beggare, beggar from Old French begart, originally a member of the Beghards, a lay brotherhood of mendicants in the Low Countries, from Middle Dutch beggaert (“mendicant”), with pejorative suffix (see -ard

65. Scalawag, after the American Civil War, a pejorative term for a white Southerner who supported the federal plan of Reconstruction or who joined with black freedmen and the so-called Carpetbaggers in support of Republican Party policies

66. Nomenclature or concepts like ‘Brahminical’ and ‘Brahminism’ (which are deployed, as we saw above, in pejorative or castigatory senses) are outcomes of generalization and theorization efforts in which every sort of ill motive and evil is imputed to the Brahmins

67. Buggery: a pejorative vernacular term and a legal term for anal copulation, chiefly between males, or with animals [from French, bougre, a corruption of Bulgarian derived from the medieval belief that Bulgarians were Manichean heretics who practiced anal copulation]

68. The act or an instance of Ameliorating or the state of being ameliorated something that ameliorates; an improvement Also called: elevation linguistics (of the meaning of a word) a change from pejorative to neutral or positively pleasant

69. When used as a pejorative or snarl word, it can mean "a new religion, that isn't mine, which I don't like."In popular Culture, the term is generally applied to religions that are controlling and extreme

70. Baka is a Japanese word that directly translates to “fool” or any of its synonyms such as “idiot” and “moron.” Online, the pejorative term has been used both ironically and unironically by Otakus and its detractors poking fun at anime culture alike.

71. Per Wikipedia: Balkanisation (British English), or Balkanization (American English), is a pejorative geopolitical term for the process of fragmentation or division of a larger region or state into smaller regions or states, which may be hostile or uncooperative with one another.

72. A 1783 pejorative use of Crackers specified men who "descended from convicts that were transported from Great Britain to Virginia at different times, and inherit so much profligacy from their ancestors, that they are the most abandoned set of men on earth"

73. Braggart (n.) "a boaster," 1570s, formerly also braggard, from French bragard (16c.), with pejorative ending (see -ard) + braguer "to flaunt, brag," perhaps originally "to show off clothes, especially breeches," from brague "breeches" (see bracket (n.))

74. ‘One Connotation of the term is that the imbalance must be really serious or exceptional.’ ‘Today the term rhetoric is generally used to refer only to the form of argumentation, often with the pejorative Connotation that rhetoric is a means of obscuring the truth.’

75. Originally a pejorative term applied to all city-dwellers, it was eventually restricted to Londoners and particularly to the "Bow-bell Cockneys": those born within earshot of Bow Bells, the bells of St Mary-le-Bow in the Cheapside district of the City of London.

76. Curtail (v.) late 15c., "restrict or limit," a word based on Old French courtault "made short," from court "short" (Old French cort, from Latin curtus, from PIE root *sker-(1) "to cut") + -ault, a pejorative suffix of Germanic origin

77. Consistently designating Isabella Bird Bishop, Mary Kingsley, and their sisterhood as " Adventuresses " to conform with contemporary usage has a pejorative effect, while their fame is attributed to a sort of conspiracy between themselves and the public to exaggerate the uniqueness of their feats of physical courage and endurance.

78. Principal Translations: Inglés: Español: Blighter n noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc.: UK, slang, pejorative (man, character) (coloquial): tipo nm nombre masculino: Sustantivo de género exclusivamente masculino, que lleva los artículos el o un en singular, y los o unos en plural.

79. Principal Translations: Inglés: Español: Bigoted adj adjective: Describes a noun or pronoun--for example, "a tall girl," "an interesting book," "a big house.": pejorative (prejudiced): intolerante adj adjetivo: Describe el sustantivo.Puede ser posesivo, numeral, demostrativo ("casa grande", "mujer alta").

80. Principal Translations: Inglés: Español: Bullshitter n noun: Refers to person, place, thing, quality, etc.: slang, vulgar, pejorative ([sb] who makes empty claims) (coloquial): farolero, farolera nm nombre masculino: Sustantivo de género exclusivamente masculino, que lleva los artículos el o un en singular, y los o