Definition, Meaning & Synonyms | English word DENUNCIATORY
DENUNCIATORY
Definitions of DENUNCIATORY
- Tending to denounce.
Number of letters
12
Is palindrome
No
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Examples of Using DENUNCIATORY in a Sentence
- The play – scheduled for an invited "industry" run-through followed by a single public performance the next night – caused a riotous response in the audience and denunciatory reviews in the days after.
- His sermons, bold, incisive, denunciatory, abounding in quaint illustrations and based on texts by no means confined to the Bible, taken down as he spoke them, and circulated (sometimes without his knowledge or consent), by his friends, told perceptibly on the German thought as well as on the German speech of his time.
- He was a frequent contributor to the Galaxy under the pen-name "Carl Benson", and published The Interference Theory of Governments, a book denunciatory of tariff and prohibitory liquor laws, and Pieces of a Broken-down Critic.
- Reviewers commented on Goodman's role as a social gadfly: "strident, denunciatory, sometimes simplistic" but "always earnest" and fitting into no neat pigeonhole.
- Comparing the work of Grigory Myasoedov and Vasily Perov, art historian Vitaly Manin noted that the painting The Zemstvo Dines opened "the next page of denunciatory art after Perov".
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