49 adverbs to describe how to denounce

She would openly denounce the assassin.

Such a person was publicly denounced as unworthy to ride on horseback, and consequently quite unworthy to be a knight.

Frank Jewett Mather, the well-known American art critic, bitterly denounced the act as one of wanton destruction, saying that Louvain "contained more beautiful works of art than the Prussian nation has produced in its entire history.

The reputed author of the Nebraska Bill finds an early occasion to make a speech at this capital indorsing the Dred Scott decision, and vehemently denouncing all opposition to it.

The selling of this strip caused great dissatisfaction among the Indians and Little Crow was severely denounced for the part he took in the transaction.

In all respects he was a good man,a beautiful type of Christian piety, with fewer faults than Luther or Calvin had, and as great an enemy as they to corruptions in State and Church, which he denounced even more fiercely and passionately.

He presented himself like a second John the Baptist at the courts of kings and princes, and there boldly denounced vice and misrule.

Even the new bishops loudly denounced them as unjust innovations; and thus Philip found zealous opponents in those on whom he had reckoned as his most servile tools.

I answer, that we dothat every helpless new-born infant, on which the chivalry of the South pounces, is, in our judgment, the owner of itselfthat we consider, that the crime of man-stealing which is so terribly denounced in the Bible, does not consist, as is alleged, in stealing a slave from a third person, but in stealing him from himselfin depriving him of self control, and subjecting him, as property, to the absolute control of another.

What happens in the United States will be denounced more violently, more loudly, than what happens in Brazil; and this is right.

He not only was never known to ill-treat or murder a prisoner, but indignantly denounced those who did, employing all his authority and eloquence in behalf of the helpless.

" In the Parliament of 1601 Sir Walter Raleigh and others vigorously denounced the exportation of ordnance.

One of the men officially denounced by President Jackson as a gang of miscreants, plotting insurrection and murderand, recently, a member of the Executive Committee of the American Anti-Slavery Society.

The sins of idleness, of anger, of covetousness, of gossip, of falsehood, of oppression, of injustice, of intemperance, of unchastity, are uniformly denounced as leading to destruction; while prudence, temperance, chastity, obedience to parents, and loyalty to truth are enjoined with the earnestness of a man who believes in personal accountability to God.

Having recited a prayer in a low deep tone, he arose, and stretching out his arms, solemnly denounced the city.

His more heinous offence, the abandonment of the innocent Hawkinses to the gallows, is the consequence of what Godwin expressly denounces, punishment for murder.

His critical temper, however, was in truth exceptionally equable; regarding it as his duty to encourage all that was good and elevating, and relentlessly to denounce all that was bad or tended to lower the tone of literature, he conscientiously acted up to the standard by which he judged others, and never allowed personal feeling to intrude upon his official judgments.

This was repeatedly denounced by Lord Brougham in the House of Lords; and although his motion for rescinding the order was supported by Lord Lyndhurst, Lord Ellenborough, and Lord Wharncliffe, the influence of the Government and the planters prevailed, and the House rejected it.

The "North British" reviewer, indeed, roundly denounces the book as atheistical, but evidently deems the case too clear for argument.

Peter Martyr attributed the piracy to Aloisio da Cadamosto, whom he consequently scathingly denounces in the seventh book of the Second Decade.

For thirty years he had sincerely denounced the dangerous intrigues of the dishonest politicians and speculators of his country; he was a member of the League for the Rights of Man, and loved to make speeches for either cause, as it might happen.

The governor sent the burgesses a message to attend him in the council chamber below, on public business, and when they came, he addressed them on the Indian troubles, specially denouncing the murder of the six chiefs in Maryland, though Colonel Washington, who commanded the forces on that expedition, was present.

This is perfectly anomalous, and it was spiritedly denounced by Sir Walter Scott, when on a recent and interesting occasion he nobly and manfully declared "Its professors had been stigmatized; and laws had been passed against them less dishonourable to them than to the statesman by whom they were proposed, and to the legislators by whom they were passed."

Resistance he had always steadily denounced, yet every day his own words seemed to be bringing the inevitable moment of collision nearer and nearer.

General Grant subsequently denounced this act as contrary to the usages of war.

49 adverbs to describe how to  denounce  - Adverbs for  denounce