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pejoratively

[ UK /pəd‍ʒˈɒɹətˌɪvli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a pejorative manner
    I am not using the word pejoratively

How To Use pejoratively In A Sentence

  • Increasingly now those who "ignorantly" voted for him ... literally not pejoratively have awakened saying to themselves over and over and over again, "What the heck have I done? Hugh Hewitt's TownHall Blog
  • In a rare reference teams are mentioned pejoratively for their potential contribution to a culture of silence and resistance through norms of loyalty.
  • Some interioranos grade imperceptibly into an acculturated native American population known pejoratively as cholos, who refer to themselves as naturales.
  • academic education is the gold standard against which other educational activity is pejoratively judged
  • Of course, the closest cognate to any of these rephrasings is the well-known term used to designate (also pejoratively) 'the Sicarii' -- the 'iota' and the 'sigma' of the Greek simply having been reversed, a common mistake in the transliteration of Semitic orthography into unrelated languages further afield like English, the 'iota' likewise too generating out of the 'ios' of the Greek singular 'Sicarios.' Robert Eisenman: Rehabilitating 'Judas Iscariot'
  • Although some of them inspired fear and were somewhat anachronic for the pantheon of the fifth century, they were not regarded pejoratively or malignantly.
  • Second, the title is often held up as a high point of the so-called "decompressed" or, more pejoratively, "Quemas" or "NuMarvel" direction that Marvel as a company trended towards some years back. Omar Karindu on Bendis’ Daredevil – Some Introductory Remarks | Comics Should Be Good! @ Comic Book Resources
  • We are unambiguously in the overshot chicago airport limousine but openly it can be univocal that our new polish is nutrition enthrallingly nightmarish and heterogenous and at the ratty foolscap we are vibraphonist pejoratively it wharf footer to be as acarpellous and precooked as landward. Rational Review
  • I am not using the word pejoratively
  • The word is often used pejoratively and has similar negative connotations to the word ‘witch’ in medieval Europe.
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