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vituperation

[vahy-too-puh-rey-shuhn, -tyoo-, vi-] / vaɪˌtu pəˈreɪ ʃən, -ˌtyu-, vɪ- /


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.

She has stanched some of the vituperation in recent days, though questions about her political future leading the nation’s second-largest city still remain.

From Los Angeles Times • Jan. 24, 2025

In Whitehall, there is some hope the arrival of Lord Mandelson as the new British ambassador might help stem the flow of personal vituperation across the Atlantic.

From BBC • Jan. 3, 2025

But the vituperation leveled at her was so extreme that you would think she had started a war.

From New York Times • Sep. 3, 2021

Davies remembers how strongly people felt: “I would go home in a taxi, and this vituperation would pour out about what a scandalous waste of money the Dome was.”

From The Guardian • Mar. 12, 2020

The whole matter rested at once upon its original basis—the right of Great Britain to tax the colonies—and this fair proposition of the Bostonians disarmed ministers of half their weapons of vituperation.

From Harper's New Monthly Magazine Vol. IV, No. 19, Dec 1851 by Various




Vocabulary lists containing vituperation


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