[
UK
/kɹˈɪtɪsˌaɪz/
]
VERB
-
act as a critic
Those who criticize others often are not perfect, either -
find fault with; express criticism of; point out real or perceived flaws
The paper criticized the new movie
Don't knock the food--it's free
How To Use criticise In A Sentence
- Van Schalkwyk also criticised some parties in the country for having a "baaskap" approach, because it suited their political purposes to keep communities apart. ANC Daily News Briefing
- The striker was criticised by fans after voicing concerns about the club 's financial plight. The Sun
- Star staff Saturday, August 22, 2009 - Powered by SIDON: The southern coastal city of Sidon saw banners fill its streets and lights brighten up its sky days before the Holy Month of weather in Baltimore has been sweltering lately, putting many at risk for heat-related conditions. such as Italy criticised Internazionale coach Jose Mourinho for comments the Portuguese made about Ramadan at the weekend. WN.com - Articles related to Lagos Fires Tourism Through Sports
- Some spouses tend to nag or criticise each other; others may be jealous or possessive. Times, Sunday Times
- Mr Vermes, who was close to that research effort, finds good reason to criticise it for slowness and carelessness—but no ground to assert a conspiracy.
- General Ricardo Izurieta, the moderate army commander, is now being criticised for political naivety by diehard Pinochetistas.
- There's also more back seat leg and headroom and more comfortable rear seats, an area criticised in the current model. The Sun
- It criticises the main contractor for seriously erring in its original estimates.
- The government has been under pressure to increase competition in banking after a highly criticised review from the competition watchdog. Times, Sunday Times
- One must be constantly alert to the hazard of maverick cyclists and uneven pavements, and you may suffer a tirade of abuse from those who now own the world, should you criticise them for unsocial behaviour.