[ US /ˈsɫiz/ ]
[ UK /slˈiːz/ ]
NOUN
  1. tastelessness by virtue of being cheap and vulgar
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How To Use sleaze In A Sentence

  • When standing on the dancefloor, I could have been in any typical club around Leicester Square or Piccadilly Circus… plenty of drunks, try-hards, sleazes, idiots, and easy girls all packed in.
  • Whether it's pitch battles, boardroom corruption, manager's bungs or ticket tout scandals, the whole league stinks of sleaze.
  • She claimed that an atmosphere of sleaze and corruption now surrounded the Government.
  • As a reporter of celebrity sleaze, I may certainly be an epicenter of pop cultural esoterica, but I'm always skeptical of the latest ‘big thing.’
  • And evils like corruption, bribery, sleaze and fraud leave an impact on young minds that yearn for an avenue to let their radical thoughts out.
  • There are also some real sleazebags who will take advantage of you and who are to be avoided.
  • He is such a sleaze trying to pretend he's resigning because he's gay and had an affair.
  • This left us a legacy of legal straitjackets which have, in their way, contributed to the climate of sleaze, greed and corruption which has lumbered us with costly tribunals.
  • Despite the unresolved allegations of sleaze and corruption, it is a matter of conviction to this writer that the bulk of our politicians are decent and well-intentioned.
  • As I have said before in the BBC's eyes Tory sleaze is a major story and the person implicated must go. Archive 2008-06-01
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