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libellous

[ UK /lˈa‍ɪbələs/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. (used of statements) harmful and often untrue; tending to discredit or malign

How To Use libellous In A Sentence

  • So what better way of proving her wrong than sticking her personal Myspace pics all over his site, libellously accusing her of being a porn star, and calling her an ugly old slack-fannied man in drag although, even in the worst pics he could dig up, I'm quite sure she's a damn sight foxier than he ever will be. The Haters of Roissy 3 : Bad Obsession
  • Posting of slanderous, libelous, abusive or defamatory material is totally prohibited.
  • Something defamatory is libellous only if it's untrue.
  • We will remove any content that may put us in legal jeopardy, such as potentially libellous or defamatory postings.
  • The judge was awarded €25,000 from the paper following uncomplimentary and libellous remarks about his telephonic habits.
  • If a letter is potentially libelous, slanderous or appears to have been written with malice or harmful intent, it will be edited or rejected.
  • Posting of slanderous, libelous, abusive or defamatory material is totally prohibited.
  • And dissing Rupert into the bargain is not only beneath you, but libellous.
  • During a radio interview, Mr Waters said the newspaper spiked his column on the grounds the article was libellous and inaccurate.
  • It must also be pointed out that there is a difference between the publishing of material that is found to be libelous and stories that may be false, but injure no individual's reputation.
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