Exact(22)
Even comedians reacted with a scorn that saw through the innocuous surface.
The critics "despised him with a scorn almost incredible in its ferocity," Harold Hobson, the London Times drama critic, noted.
Despite her scorn for much of the press corps — a scorn not infrequently reciprocated — they covered her anyway.
The whole world is now in on it with global populist leaders riding to success on the back of a scorn for the elites.
Is there anything particular to socialism that could fuel a scorn for women distinct from the more predictable and comprehensible sexism on the right?
For the past five years, no one else has written about the current political dispensation with a brilliance more consistent, and a scorn more magnificent, than Sidney Blumenthal.
Similar(37)
The original Maleficent was more veracious, ambiguous, and interesting than a scorned-in-love woman out for revenge.
Who better for this purpose than a posse of drivers, bound together by a noble scorn for the brake pedal?
He was the embodiment of "race betrayal," an object of scorn, a scapegoat for all of our political self-doubts.
Lord knows what drives the Paladins, aside from a Calvinistic scorn of man as epicure.
A prevailing scorn for handcraft encouraged Guyton, who readily confesses his own manual ineptitude.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com