24 adverbs to describe how to scorned

The queen of Egypt felt bitterly the scorn with which she was popularly regarded as the representative of an effeminate and licentious people.

L. i. Thrice happy they beneath their northern skies Who that worst fearthe fear of deathdespise Hence they no cares for this frail being feel, But rush undaunted on the pointed steel; Provoke approaching fate, and bravely scorn To spare that life which must so soon return.

They must be terrible insults, and just because she was uttering them in a mysterious language, he felt her scorn more deeply.

The Major, after the incident at Gallup, did not scorn Wampus so openly as before; but he still reserved a suspicion that the fellow was at heart a coward and a blusterer.

All this might have been detected at once by any human intellect not distracted by correspondence with strangers, and enfeebled by habitually scorning the intellect of its own progenitor.

On the contrary, her nature was exceedingly frank, even defiant, and from pride, perhaps, rather than principle, she scorned no baseness so heartily as duplicity.

Smile but on me, and you shall scorn, Henceforth, to be of princes born.

"Nor ye ain't that chap ez beat his wife unto death at Santa Clara?" Lance honestly scorned the imputation.

On the contrary, it is as one who has taught science here for more than twenty years (for mathematics, though good-humouredly scorned by the biologists on account of the abnormal certainty of its conclusions, is still reckoned among the sciences) that I beg to sign myself,Your obedient servant, Charles L. Dodgson, Mathematical Lecturer of Christ Church, Oxford.

I indignantly scorned his vile insineration.

Very lightly you may scorn your enemy in your heart, but at your peril you seek to do him mischief with your hands.

He must have scoffed and scorned at me merely because I had faith in his word.

If I have been cold and distant to him, it is because I will not draw him near me to be cruelly scorned and disappointed!"

Bob, mounting his own horse, wore no hat, but it was a pet grievance of his that Betty persistently scorned headgear whether riding or walking.

Why is no poet call'd to birth In such a favour'd spot of earth? How high his vent'rous Muse might rise, And proudly scorn to ask supplies From the Parnassian hill, the fire Of verse, Mont Blanc might well inspire.

She is a mother, and lives in her children; she has seen one that is near her heart publicly scorned, and she feels like a mother.

Youth looks out of her bright eyes and flashes scorn or denial, perhaps too readily, when she encounters flattery or meanness.

The officials of his day excited his contempt, and reciprocally scorned his teachings.

Add to this physiognomy a small and rather spare figure, dressed in the cleanest of calicoes, always made in one style, and rigidly scorning hoops,without a symptom of a collar, in whose place (or it may be over which)

They are even at times ruthlessly scorned by their benefactors in the Wilhelmstrasse.

A MERE GULL CITIZEN Is one much about the same model and pitch of brain that the clown is, only of somewhat a more polite and finical ignorance, and as sillily scorns him as he is sillily admired by him.

Each often unwisely scorned the other.

He did not scorn the most revolting miscreant as the realist of to-day commonly scorns his own hero.

[1905]"He hath scorned all money, bribes, gifts, upright otherwise and sincere, hath inserted himself to no fond imagination, and sustained all those tyrannical concupiscences of the body, hath lost all his honour, captivated by vainglory."

24 adverbs to describe how to  scorned  - Adverbs for  scorned