Exact(3)
He deplores being referred to as Kaltenborn of the crisis.
Eric deplores being referred to as a midget and favors the sobriquet Eric the Actor.
Although he's worth at least £1bn and lives in a £10m house, Sir Richard Branson deplores being wasteful with money.
Similar(57)
You would think the one sort of invasion just about everyone deplores was hacking.
Among the things the writer deplores are Consolidated Edison's holes in the street.
What, asked The New Republic in a question the First Lady finds to be a perfect small example of the cynicism she deplores, was all that supposed to mean?
There is a proclivity in both Japan and the US for people to crowd up around the center of any activity; a large part of the congestion each citizen deplores is self-created.
What Bergson deplores is encrustation — the way in which we dry and stiffen up, taking ourselves, our poses, and our beliefs so seriously that they sap us of pliability, poise, and goodwill.
Whether Clinton realizes it or not, the stagnation she deplores is another indictment of Obama's growth policies: Wages tend to increase faster when the economy grows more vigorously.
The performance of class that Varagur deplores is undeniably part of the skin care fad; that fresh-faced, milk-bathed Glossier complexion is expensive, and intentionally signifies a certain kind of hip, youngish, upwardly mobile professional woman.
What the Brits deplore is people who complain in the wrong way — with an over-the-top rant.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com