Exact(4)
"If I took their side, I could be ostracized, too".
Mrs. Clinton went down that road in her speech on Thursday, describing how a country that cracked down on Internet freedom or harbored groups that conduct cyberattacks could be ostracized.
From the fact that a gentleman could be ostracized in Cincinnati for using the word "corset" in mixed company to a brief history of longhorn cattle, his book provides an enjoyably anecdotal backward look.
Even though federal workers have legal protections against getting fired or retaliated against at work for going to authorities, in reality agency officials and coworkers could soon learn of your complaint, and you could be ostracized or pushed out by people unhappy that you blew the whistle.
Similar(56)
"This is one of the few areas where blacks could come in and not be ostracized," said Mrs. Dixon, who remembers seeing signs on houses she looked at on Long Island that said "No Blacks Allowed".
They fear too strident a stance could mean they will lose contracts or even be ostracized as Google Inc was after a dispute with China over censorship and hacking.
I'd be ostracized at school.
I'll be ostracized at the tennis club!
He should also be ostracized for his actions.
If her parents supported her, they, too, would be ostracized.
You might lose your job, you might lose your friends, you might be ostracized.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com