rancorous

[ US /ˈɹæŋkɝəs/ ]
[ UK /ɹˈɑːnkəɹəs/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. showing deep-seated resentment
    preserve...from rancourous envy of the rich
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How To Use rancorous In A Sentence

  • By the end Antrobus has become a self-hating figure rancorously describing his wife as ‘a petty, blind, treacherous little beast‘.
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  • During this rancorous summer of Brexit and bitter party leadership elections I could not read enough about the government cats. Times, Sunday Times
  • Very rancorous it must have been, and would duly go on file and be forgotten. MOONDROP TO MURDER
  • It seems to be aiming for a modern Catcher in the Rye with its sardonic, rancorous troubled kid character.
  • Three things for ever hinder her to visit us, for fear Of the intriguing spy and eke the rancorous envier; The Book of The Thousand Nights And A Night
  • In the 1970s, his parents moved from the country's eastern region to settle in Camden, then separated rancorously when he was six.
  • The deal ended after a series of rancorous disputes.
  • Yet the very triumph of these principles imparted a rancorous quality to public life, as the wealthy pastoral and professional elite fought to hold on to their advantages.
  • This last vilifying barb you offer in yet another comment when, having had the whole root of your hatred revealed in the posting of that email exchange, rather than actually give grounds for your risible concern with a purported conflict of interests, you continue your rancorous pillorying, not to mention the concomitant pompous self-aggrandisement. How Not to be a Writer
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