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Discover LudwigThe word 'slanders' is a correct and usable word in written English
It is a plural noun form of the verb 'slander', which means to make false and damaging statements about someone. Here is an example of how to use the word 'slanders' in a sentence: "Despite numerous slanders against her character, she remained resilient and focused on her goals."
Exact(59)
Its charter, which contains anti-Semitic slurs and slanders, seeks to establish sharia law on all the territory of mandated Palestine, between the Jordan river and the Mediterranean.
It is not clear whether such slanders still impress Malaysia's voters, especially its Muslims.
Demonstrators at the American embassy on September 11th vented anger not only over a shoddy, obscure film shot in California that slanders the Prophet Muhammad, but at Egypt's government for failing to do much about it.
After the flight of Louis XVI (June 20 21 , 1791, for which Robespierre vainly demanded his trial, the slanders against the Revolutionary deputy became twice as violent.
Embittered by the slanders and by the accusations of dictatorship being spread both by the royalists and by his colleagues, the Montagnards, he stayed away from the National Convention and then, after 10 Messidor (June 28), from the Committee of Public Safety, confining his denunciations of counterrevolutionary intrigues to the Jacobin Club.
Washington was well aware of the hostility in congress, of the slanders spread by Rush and James Lovell of Massachusetts, and of the effect of forgeries published in the American press by adroit British agents.
Claudio's slanders of Hero have so outraged her cousin Beatrice that she turns to Benedick, pleading with him to kill Claudio.
To a denunciation of the Latin rite by Michael Cerularius, patriarch of Constantinople, he replied in 1053 with the tract Adversus Graecorum calumnias ("Against the Slanders of the Greeks").
Though his heroic biographers would later present the Cid as the blameless victim of unscrupulous noble enemies and of Alfonso's willingness to listen to unfounded slanders, it seems likely that the Cid's penchant for publicly humiliating powerful men may have largely contributed to his downfall.
In a New York Times article in 1980 she promised "to fight these slanders with all my means and through whatever judicial means are available".
Similar(1)
The older slanders cannibalism and incest that had troubled the Apologists in the 2nd century no longer commanded credence.
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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