10 collocations for stigmatising

In the light of a passage like this, from the most distinguished representative of German humanism, it is easier to grasp the failure of educated Germany to understand the sequel of the South African War, or the aspirations of the Slav peoples, or to stigmatise the folly of their statesmen in Poland, Denmark, Alsace-Lorraine, and Belgium.

Even if he thinks it does more good than harma position which must be very difficult for one who believes the common supernatural conception of it to be entirely falseeven then, how is he discharged from the duty of stigmatising the harm which he admits that it does?

So he writes playfully to me at an earlier time: "Hurrell Froude and I took into consideration your opinion that 'there are good men of all parties,' and agreed that it is a bad doctrine for these days; the time being come in which, according to John Miller, 'scoundrels must be called scoundrels'; and, moreover, we have stigmatised the said opinion by the name of the Coleridge Heresy.

Now he used it savagely himself to stigmatise his own people.

He could not but expect, that, in stigmatising with contempt and ridicule so many persons by name, some of them would retaliate.

60 Says Reynard' 'Tis a cruel case, That man should stigmatise our race, No doubt, among us rogues you find, As among dogs, and human kind; And yet (unknown to me and you) There may be honest men and true.

Is Mrs. Trollope less vain than they when she declares, and merely declares, her own to be the real creed, and stigmatises its rival so fiercely?

Thomas Aquinas directly stigmatises trade as a disgraceful means of gain, because the exchange of wares does not necessitate labour or the satisfaction of necessary wants: Muhammedan tradition says, "The pious merchant is a pioneer on the road of God.

It would be too harsh to stigmatise such a train of thought as self-seeking and hypocritical.

These last ornaments are proper in that Horatian satire, which rather ridicules the follies of the age, than stigmatises the vices of individuals; but in this style Dryden has made few essays.

10 collocations for  stigmatising