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Discover LudwigThe phrase "malicious men" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe individuals who intend to cause harm or suffering to others.
Example: "The investigation revealed that a group of malicious men had been plotting to undermine the community's safety."
Alternatives: "malevolent individuals" or "wicked people."
Exact(1)
These costs, though, are generally imposed not by malicious men in suits but by consumers, whose tastes change and who prize the consistency, convenience and low prices that big companies can provide.
Similar(59)
This deliciously sordid tale opens with some choice passages from the private journal of Francis Richmond, "a silly, malicious man" with a dilettante's eye for the decorative arts and a busybody's nose for scandal.
Ron Taylor, who created the voice of Audrey II, the malicious man-eating plant in the cult musical "Little Shop of Horrors," as well as writing and starring in the sleeper hit "It Ain't Nothin' but the Blues" on Broadway, died on Jan . 15at his home in Los Angeles.
With IoT ecosystems potentially accounting for thousands and millions of devices, device identification and authentication becomes key in preventing malicious man-in-the-middle, key compromise and identity-spoofing attacks.
Lenovo's Superfish installations became the subject of scrutiny today when The Next Web raised security concerns regarding the means in which Superfish injected its ads in user browsers, which effectively employed tactics used in malicious man-in-the-middle attacks.
Here was no deviant criminal, no ruthless or malicious man with ill intent.
A methodical and malicious man who purchased the military-style rifles his former neighbor used to massacre 14 people in San Bernardino.
Despite warnings from her sister, a young girl, Laura, falls victim to malicious goblin men peddling irresistible, enchanted fruit.
However petty and malicious the man could be, his artistic achievement was huge, not only in sheer physical bulk but also in ambition, imagination and invention.
But Mr. Badillo's ill-advised derision of Mr. Beame as "a malicious little man" during a particularly nasty debate helped seal his fate.
"You are a malicious little man," a scowling Mr. Badillo infamously told Mr. Beame in a televised debate, shaking his finger at his 5-foot-2 opponent.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com