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Definitions

opprobrious

[uh-proh-bree-uhs] / əˈproʊ bri əs /


Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

He hated the term “black” — back then spelled with a lowercase B — which had often been an opprobrious way of talking about the people to whose fight for equality he’d devoted his life.

From New York Times • Jul. 14, 2021

On the one hand Jerry has zoned in on a fertile topic for humour – the idea that remarking on something as simple as the motion of a hand could result in opprobrious censure.

From The Guardian • Aug. 3, 2017

One hesitates, despite the show's size, to use the opprobrious word blockbuster.

From Time Magazine Archive

Not one opprobrious epithet did he hurl, not one ringing denunciation.

From Time Magazine Archive

Still another group earned for themselves the supposedly opprobrious but decidedly vague title of "Dualists," by rejecting what they conceived to be the pantheism of Hegel.

From International Congress of Arts and Science, Volume I Philosophy and Metaphysics by Various