65 collocations for slandering

We might say, 'so slander any man friend as to expect him to do this or that unworthy thing for you.']

"I'll larn ye to come inter a decent neighborhood an' slander its women.

"Don't mind me," said Ralph; "I was just talking, as usual, at random, and slandering the sex.

Men of reflection felt that no well-regulated mind can ever engage in slandering one person for the purpose of elevating another.

"What's the matter with it?" replied D.K.T. "The matter with it," spoke Mr. Wilbram terribly, "is that it slanders my wife.

he may slander a few more eminent characters, he may go on to deride venerable and holy institutions, he may stir up more discontent and sedition, but he will have no peace of mind within ...

Don't you go for to slander Trehayne.

And they say the head lady of themprioress, or abbess, as they called herwithstood him, and cursed him, in the name of the Lord, for a hypocrite who robbed harmless women under the cloak of punishing them for sins they'd never committed (for they say, sir, he went up to court, and slandered the nuns there for drunkards and worse).

If we said that 'optimates' signified the men who bribed and abused office under the banner of the Senate and its connections, and that 'populares' meant men who bribed and abused office with the interests of the people outside the senatorial pale upon their lips, we might do injustice to many good men on both sides, but should hardly be slandering the parties.

Sham'st thou not, Autumn, unadvisedly To slander such rare creatures as they be? SUM.

Why do I slander the dead in my thoughts?

No man rises to such a height as to become conspicuous, but he is on one side censured by undiscerning malice, which reproaches him for his best actions, and slanders his apparent and incontestable excellencies; and idolized on the other by ignorant admiration, which exalts his faults and follies into virtues.

Now, here, I call on you to answer to Him for the innocent lives which you have endangered and destroyed, for the innocent souls to whom you have slandered their heavenly Father by your devil's doctrines this day!

The lady, who so foully slandered her fellow, fell with child in the same year.

"We'll larn you to slander honest fokes.

Thy lords don't slander folk.

Blind madness his haughty stomach spurred, And he slandered the Godhead with sinful word, And strutting in pride he blasphemed, the crowd Of servile courtiers applauding loud.

When the man on the table continued to slander the Government, and finally named a name, there was silence.

There is no vermin in the land like him: he slanders both heaven and earth with pretended dearths when there is no cause of scarcity.

It is not impossible to find on board some specimen of" "Cousin Benedict," said Mrs. Weldon, "do you then slander Captain Hull?

A member of the first-seated and highest class amongst the judges, muffled like the rest, but the tone of whose voice, and the stoop of whose person, announced him to be more advanced in years than the other two who had before spoken, arose with difficulty, and said with a trembling voice, "The child of the cord who is before us, has been convicted of folly and rashness in slandering our holy institution.

349, n. 2; said to have slandered, iv.

He that can dispense with himself to slander a Jew or a Turk, doth in so doing render himself worse than either of them by profession is: for even they, and even pagans themselves, disallow the practice of inhumanity and iniquity.

Burney mentions a report that Hawkins had been slandering Johnson.

He used to give way to violent anger and slandered Julia as a stepmother, while upon Augustus he heaped abundant reproaches in the matter of his paternal inheritance.

65 collocations for  slandering