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Babbitt and Einhorn echo earlier derogations of his work as too sentimental (the Victorians) or insufficiently Russian (a group of composers who were Tchaikovsky's late-19th-century contemporaries), but the emergent issue now is a question that could throw what the critic Terry Teachout calls "the Tchaikovsky wars" into Armageddon.
Publishers and booksellers are complicit with other keepers of the canon in the philistine derogation of great documentary writing by reserving the label "literature" on book jackets and store shelves only for works of fancy.
The derogation of derogation is doing well.
They signed an unprecedented derogation of power from Whitehall.
But in American political history, that word has profound resonance as a derogation of opportunism.
Many Tories were demanding she went for a temporary derogation of human rights laws.
"My whole life has been a derogation of my responsibilities to my fatal foetus".
Granting the officers anonymity would be a "major derogation of the open justice principles", said barrister Caoilfhionn Gallagher, for the media.
That meaning, metaphorically extended, landed -- plop! -- in the middle of political terminology as a derogation of moderation.
This could have been a derogation of the president's policy or of the chief editorial writer's prose.
The "old regime" is always pejorative, coming from the French revolutionaries' gleeful derogation of the government of the last Bourbon kings as l'ancien régime.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com