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Though Aristotle considered wit a valuable part of conversation (Nicomachean Ethics 4, 8), he agreed with Plato that laughter expresses scorn.
An intense, opinionated man who wears a baseball cap during auctions, Mr. Cohen expresses scorn for those who see a television ad on Saturday, drive in from the city on Sunday and head back that evening with a signed contract on a new house.
Similar(58)
Speaking privately, some Wall Streeters express scorn for day traders.
The United States, expressing scorn for the offer, said it would press for a new Security Council resolution.
Law professors who deal with issues of feminism expressed scorn over the talk.
Officials at the Financial Information Services Agency expressed scorn for the deal they inherited, saying it was too generous to Accenture.
Mr. Wasow expressed scorn for executives who hyped the Internet, only to flee when the technology-stock bubble burst last year.
Mr. Trump's remarks on Friday came after Mr. Obama, in a brief exchange with reporters at the White House, again expressed scorn for the subject.
IN HER novel "White Teeth", published in 2000, Zadie Smith noted that in London, "all kids, whatever their nationality", seem to express scorn with a Jamaican accent.
Dr. Assad expressed scorn for Prime Minister Ehud Barak, who on Friday announced that he might turn away from further peace talks with the Palestinians.
Angry Young Men, various British novelists and playwrights who emerged in the 1950s and expressed scorn and disaffection with the established sociopolitical order of their country.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com