How To Use Savagery In A Sentence

  • Griffons were pony-sized, quadrupedal avians with such a reputation for savagery that they had been banned from all the Northern mountain provinces.
  • Even Lord of the Flies - which I love as a metaphor for many, many things, like the savagery of humanity - treats the children more as symbolic figures.
  • So the Church, recognising that its irenic precepts were largely ignored, tried to reduce the savagery of war.
  • When thus arranged, they reveal with some degree of certainty the entire range of human progress from savagery to civilization.
  • Savagery, etymologically derived from the Latin word for "forest", was associated with wildness and stood in opposition to civilization. Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
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  • Now we see the savagery of the cornered beast at 2 percent.
  • They were faced with retreating into savagery or finding somewhere where knowledge and technical skills could be preserved. A Plague of Angels
  • The very means by which the dictator had clung to power, his legendary savagery, had destroyed his internal support.
  • After a century of "noble savage" idealization, the peasantry's violence during the French Revolution had reawakened fears of more "ignoble" savagery.
  • A caricaturist and political cartoonist of exceptional savagery, Scarfe's work is diverse, prolific, and visually stunning as well as being controversial.
  • We, the peoples who were objects of imperialist expansionism, for ever the infantile dwarfs who required the benign or brutal patronage of the white superperson, in earlier times had to be liberated form the state of noble savagery. Editorial
  • I do my best to forgive him for savagery.
  • At last people suspected of savagery in Nazi-occupied Europe faced prosecution in British courts.
  • So sadistic, remorseless brutes cannot dodge true justice for their savagery. The Sun
  • a craving for barbaric splendor, for savagery and color and the throb of drums
  • Communication, except the more primitive kinds and the printed word were lost as survivors slipped backward toward savagery.
  • Was the students' act bordering on something like savagery when they took advantage of the workers' penurious state?
  • The Bible has a lot to say about darkness - about human wickedness and savagery and indifference.
  • To be aggressive in behaviour, arrogant in manners and harsh in language is a manifestation of savagery.
  • However, the descent into savagery is opposed by many of the children, recognising it as a construct imposed from above by adults.
  • Then, by dint of pushing and tugging, the head was got into the "lunette," the upper part of which fell in such wise that the neck was fixed as in a ship's port-hole -- and all this was accomplished amidst such confusion and with such savagery that one might have thought that head some cumbrous thing which it was necessary to get rid of with the greatest speed. The Three Cities Trilogy: Paris, Volume 5
  • This style of warfare appalled Europeans, who did not see savagery in their own military and civil punishments, the brandings and whippings and burnings at the stake over religious disputes. George Washington’s First War
  • Like the Kutchin, they were in the Upper Status of savagery. Houses and House-Life of the American Aborigines
  • The police exist to contain and civilise our moments of savagery; prosecutors exist to ask questions with an open mind. Times, Sunday Times
  • In my younger and more vulnerable years, I believed school offered a gentle refuge from the cutthroat savagery of the working world.
  • The _namu_ when stale causes the Marquesans to revert to wickedest savagery, and has incited many murders. White Shadows in the South Seas
  • There is a malign intellectual subculture that seeks to excuse savagery by denying the facts. Times, Sunday Times
  • It is also a saga about the savagery that can result when the British and the Irish resort to their base instincts.
  • Soon after he enters the New World, the European sheds the skin of civilization, passes through a temporary condition of savagery, and finally appears as a completely new creature.
  • How then does Churchward account for the archaeologists ' theory that man has struggled up from savagery to his present level?
  • She was treated with particular savagery by cartoonists, who represented her as ugly, overdressed, over-fecund and avid for diamonds and pearls.
  • Ultra-Chartists, 'Danes' as they were then called, coming into his territory with their 'five points,' or rather with their five-and-twenty thousand _points_ and edges too, of pikes namely and battle-axes; and proposing mere Heathenism, confiscation, spoliation, and fire and sword, -- Edmund answered that he would oppose to the utmost such savagery. Past and Present Thomas Carlyle's Collected Works, Vol. XIII.
  • Christopher Tookey said the whole Protestant community was implicated in the gang's savagery.
  • The world is a difficult place, and many tragedies have befallen mankind in its upward climb from savagery, some of them quite recently.
  • We are well on the return path to savagery, to a society void of values, a veritable jungle in which only the strong survive and thrive.
  • Intercultural struggles, with their unbridled savagery, are the great nightmare of the next century. "
  • Handing down a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment, the judge said it was an ‘evil and foul’ murder of ‘unspeakable savagery’.
  • The case of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, the Iranian woman whose death by stoning is ever-imminent, has become a mainstay on the docket of news reportage which dutifully highlights the savagery of Islamic law. Beenish Ahmed: Damsels in Distress: Using Victimized Women as Political Ploys
  • He uses the mesh of the jungle screen to play on our fears of the unknown and the pitiless savagery that is the reality of nature.
  • They also know that some servicemen envy them their distance from the savagery of war. Times, Sunday Times
  • There is a malign intellectual subculture that seeks to excuse savagery by denying the facts. Times, Sunday Times
  • In the far north, on the other hand, the harsh environment seems to have brought all the savagery of the man's nature, and the woman was in fact a slave, subject to every whim of cruelty, excepting among the Kutchin of the Upper Yukon, noted for their kind treatment of their women. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability
  • Certainly there was a savagery about the way in which they progged the air with their assegais that made one picture them as _capables de tout_. Punch or the London Charivari, Vol. 147, October 7, 1914
  • So sadistic, remorseless brutes cannot dodge true justice for their savagery. The Sun
  • In savagery and in the Older and the Middle Period of barbarism the family was in the syndyasmian or pairing form into which it had passed from a previous lower form. Houses and House-Life of the American Aborigines
  • We saw the Picts sink into abysmal savagery, the Atlanteans into apedom again. Wings in the Night
  • Our capacity for savagery grows as rational thought is overwhelmed by fear, despair, and anger.
  • Gillray so lovingly renders the popinjay, and we laugh so deeply at his pretensions, that the savagery of the social criticism, though devastating, is somewhat mitigated.
  • He uses the mesh of the jungle screen to play on our fears of the unknown and the pitiless savagery that is the reality of nature.
  • There were many revolts which were put down with incredible savagery.
  • To the northwest, the descendants of the Atlanteans, climbing unaided from apedom into primitive savagery, have not yet met the conquerors. The Coming of Conan The Cimmerian
  • They were faced with retreating into savagery or finding somewhere where knowledge and technical skills could be preserved. A Plague of Angels
  • Those same raw nerves, however, also spilled into every bar of the opera's music and also explain the torrential savagery of the emotions it recreates in the listener.
  • Charges of brutality, of savagery, have been laid at Simon's door, but perhaps this is the first time posterity has reproached him for ordinary honesty.
  • Nor would the theory account for the absence of a taboo in the lower savagery, nor for the totemistic character of the lady, nor, least of all, for the peltry which is the most picturesque, if not the most important, incident in this group of tales. The Science of Fairy Tales An Inquiry into Fairy Mythology
  • Their complete failure results into their degeneration into savagery.
  • Sometimes, when the east wind is full of meditative savagery, one almost fancies that a hot odour may have travelled in its caravan from the heart of China, bringing us a message from the spice trees of Kwangtung. The Spring of Joy: A Little Book of Healing
  • Transported to the Americas through European exploration and colonization, the notion of savagery was an important aspect of what Ramos calls the Edenic discourse, which "exalted the Indians as children of Paradise" and Citizendium, the Citizens' Compendium - Recent changes [en]
  • Savagery and barbarism were contemptuous expressions used by ‘civilised’ people.
  • Instead of slowing the violence down so that we can be exposed to the full savagery of the acts and the brutal men who do them, Derek robs them of any impact at all, leaving campiness that can only be fully appreciated by an exhausted 20-something unable to sleep at 2 a.m. Insomniac Movie Theater: Tarzan, The Ape Man » Scene-Stealers
  • In the progress of the species from savagery to advanced civilization, anthropomorphism grows into theology, while physicism (if I may so call it) develops into science; but the development of the two is contemporaneous, not successive. Lay Sermons, Addresses and Reviews
  • There was intense savagery in the putting down of the Cathars.
  • Not everything in the garden is, or should be, lovely - a bit of aggression goes a long way towards introducing drama into the prettiest plot, with spikes, spears, prickles and thorns providing sublime savagery in the flower beds.
  • West Indian Blacks, were we ever to become constitutionally dominant in our native islands, would emulate in savagery our Haytian fellow - West Indian Fables by James Anthony Froude Explained by J. J. Thomas
  • Simultaneously marked by its bestial savagery and spiritual transcendence, the primitive other is made to coalesce the physical with the metaphysical.
  • Guernica is etched in my consciousness as the image of defencelessness, trampled innocence, Franco's savagery.
  • John is known as a ‘blunt’ critic; one who tells his unsugared truths directly, who is not reticent to attack ‘with savagery’ books he feels insult him. On Negative Book Reviewing: Audio Interview with John Metcalf
  • So sadistic, remorseless brutes cannot dodge true justice for their savagery. The Sun
  • There is a malign intellectual subculture that seeks to excuse savagery by denying the facts. Times, Sunday Times
  • The palpable animosity between the two women is one of the reasons for the film's scalding savagery. Times, Sunday Times
  • He fled to the USA as the general assumed control of the country and re-imposed the savagery that characterised the dictatorships of the past.
  • The velocity and ferocity of some of the attack moves that zoom around the arena are truly bestial in their utter savagery.
  • It shows a man being flayed alive - slowly, methodically and with increasing savagery.
  • As usual, Jack has done a first-rate job of muckraking, but there is no way to disguise that boxing is planned savagery.
  • We are never more than a single generation away from total savagery.
  • The news of this savagery spread through the island.
  • In the male mythical imagination women are repeatedly associated with nature rather than culture, savagery rather than civilization, the wild rather than the tame.
  • In these beliefs zoolatry, litholatry and all the other nature worships outlived the savagery that had created them. The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism
  • In the case of Larry Talbot and his hirsute pals, these films suggested that only a thin line kept us from reverting to a state of animalistic savagery.
  • Akbar recalls the protection afforded religious minorities by medieval Muslim emirs and then details the savagery visited on ‘Saracens’ and heretics in Christian states of the Middle Ages.
  • The area is deathly quiet, except for the sound of pelting rain and the soft voice of our guide, calmly and precisely detailing acts of barbaric savagery which still beggar the imagination.
  • New Orleans was perhaps distinctive in the extreme savagery of its ghettos, and the inability of civic organizations to penetrate poor areas.
  • One of his friends, Michael, had his jaw broken and narrowly missed losing an eye, such was the savagery of the attack.
  • Jerry was never to see the dark island of savagery again, although often in his sleeping dreams it was to return to him in vivid illusion, as he relived his days upon it, from the destruction of the Arangi and the man-eating orgy on the beach to his flight from the shell-scattered house and flesh of Nalasu. CHAPTER XXIV
  • Deep within that dark maze where no man or woman had ever survived the Minotaur's 9)savagery, Theseus killed the monster, then followed the gold thread to freedom.
  • I was seeing savagery growing, and this sadistic taste for murder. Times, Sunday Times
  • Since you can give yourself one by walking in to a door, it hardly betokens animal savagery.
  • The savagery of some of these murders is worth a moment's pause.
  • Symbolism enwraps interlocked themes; male sexuality, female desire, hidden agendas, friendly faces hiding monsters, human indifference to suffering, the mindless savagery that is civilization — crueler than any giant ape could be, calling us to a need to redefine our relationship with wildness, with the animal world itself. Boing Boing: December 4, 2005 - December 10, 2005 Archives
  • Admittedly, Bean improves rapidly once crowned, and sets about disposing of his rivals with suitable savagery.
  • The pig symbolised savagery, anarchy and destruction.
  • Should we be condemning criminals for their savagery if they don't share our ability to exert self-control and free will? Times, Sunday Times
  • Chartists, 'Danes' as they were then called, coming into his territory with their 'five points,' or rather with their five - and-twenty thousand _points_ and edges too, of pikes namely and battleaxes; and proposing mere Heathenism, confiscation, spoliation, and fire and sword, -- Edmund answered that he would oppose to the utmost such savagery. Past and Present
  • They threw away their advantage by their savagery to the black population.
  • The racism alluded to in the first part explodes in all its savagery, and the town – which seemed to be guilty only of a forgivable insularity – becomes a cesspit.
  • Their comicbook savagery and highly stylised aesthetic remain highly influential even today. Times, Sunday Times
  • Marrakech is the great market of the south...not only the Atlas with its feudal chiefs and their wild clansman, but all that lies beyond of heat and savagery: the Sahara of the veiled Touaregs, Dakka, Timbuctoo, Senegal and the Soudan. Richard Bangs: Why Would Anyone Bomb Jemaa El F'na Square in Marrakesh?
  • There was unity and alienation and sweetness and savagery and hope and despair. The Sun
  • Michi's eyes reflected the uncontrolled rage of the sea, and the frigid savagery of ice.
  • This film at least rips away the superficial gloss, and forces us to confront the utter savagery of the abuse heaped on Christ.
  • It was a fantastic microcosm, full of humour and savagery.
  • That path, that we have tended to follow in the past as in the present, has led us no closer to an abatement of the widespread savagery of criminals.
  • Its story of a group of schoolboys stranded on a desert island after an aeroplane crash who descend into savagery still has the power to shock and enthral.
  • They threw away their advantage by their savagery to the black population.
  • Eastman's depiction certainly seeks to contradict one prominent strain of thought at the end of the nineteenth century regarding the irredeemable savagery of American Indians, including, notably, Indian children.
  • The viola and first violin found a droll savagery in the waltz, while the scherzo turned into an explosive rage of protest. Times, Sunday Times
  • There was unity and alienation and sweetness and savagery and hope and despair. The Sun
  • Hall, the foremost child psychologist in the United States, argued that the child recapitulated the stages of evolution of the human race, from pre-savagery to civilization.
  • Thus Darwin may have employed the word "savagery" to describe the cultural level of non-Europeans.
  • In a kind of leashed savagery, she probed the fowl with her knife point. There Will Be Time
  • That ghastly crudity of seeing in sex nothing but a functional act and a certain fumbling with clothes is, in my opinion, a low degree of barbarism, savagery.
  • It was gentilism that everywhere prevailed throughout the myriads of unrecorded centuries during which the foremost races of mankind struggled up through savagery and barbarism into civilization, while weaker and duller races lagged behind at various stages on the way. The Discovery of America Vol. 1 (of 2) with some account of Ancient America and the Spanish Conquest
  • Later, when my kidnappers beat me up after a failed escape attempt, I became aware that their savagery was about much more than British or American foreign policy.

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