For once the suspicions about the fishiness of the outcome are correct, but not in any pejorative sense. |
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Most bodybuilders refer to water in the pejorative, fingering it as the cause for water retention or a puffy and bloated appearance. |
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The individual may be classified as incomplete, immature, or by other pejorative terms which detract from his dignity. |
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Sometimes, opposition to a government-funded project leads to cleverly pejorative phrases. |
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Together they agreed on casting black extras in crowd scenes and in a wider range of roles while refraining from pejorative humor. |
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So I don't really have a lot of sympathy for those who want to use pejorative terms to characterise a negotiation process. |
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There's nothing axiomatically pejorative about it, and some passages of history have made it a term of honor. |
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I don't see any pejorative connotations in the term and so up until now haven't been too worried about using it. |
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Sorbs in this country usually called themselves Wends, but that term has acquired a pejorative ring in Europe today. |
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I'm not using the term in the pejorative sense, but as the economists use it. |
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Americans have long used these pejorative terms to designate scientific and medical theories and practices for which they have no respect. |
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The ingredients are fear, pejorative statements, secrecy, lies, a bought press and economic uncertainty. |
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A few minutes of looking reveals similar pejorative statements throughout the book. |
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Believe it or not, this was a pejorative term, implying unrealistic ambitions. |
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The pejorative charge of anachronism as the inadmissible confusion of periods or eras presupposes that the accuser knows what the correct time of history is. |
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Bujot means 'rag doll', a pejorative word to indicate someone without any personality. |
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Meanwhile, the pirates, to put it in realistic, if pejorative, terms, have the advantage within this competitive world. |
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It's used in a pejorative way to suggest we didn't understand what it meant. |
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People who speak that way are speaking in pejorative, demeaning terms. |
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The concept of cult is sufficiently pejorative for its use alone to represent a serious violation of the author's rights. |
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I spoke previously in a pejorative way about religions which got involved in politics. |
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But the reality is, however proud folks may have been of where they lived, they understood that South Central was a pejorative to the rest of the world. |
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Wend tends to have a pejorative ring, especially in Eastern Germany, and today in all scholarly literature in Europe the word Sorb is preferred to Wend. |
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The use of pejorative terms, however, served to paint such encounters in a different light which would then lend support to the conclusion at which their Lordships arrived. |
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The term originated in England in the 18th century and is generally considered to be pejorative and anthropologically inaccurate. |
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Dissent is dehumanized, as it is branded with this pejorative title and other insulting labels like xenophobe, nativist, peacenik or anti-American dupe. |
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Let your substantive argument, not pejorative adjectives, do the job. |
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While an undoubtedly pejorative term, it is of use in understanding the pervasive freshness that scythes through the nose on first sniff and continues into the palate. |
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It's a pejorative that means Americans don't understand luxury. |
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Rather than offering a balanced analysis, the author's main focus is on scandals, which are enhanced with sidebars and pejorative human-interest stories. |
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Consciously or not, we are unlikely to be very sympathetic or fair to people we have been talking about in pejorative language all our lives. |
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In IMO terminology, there is no such concept as an FOC and the presenter noted that the use of this pejorative acronym should be discontinued. |
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For these reasons, we try to help our students understand the pejorative implications of such stereotypical locutions and believe that what they say matters. |
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Today the term rhetoric is generally used to refer only to the form of argumentation, often with the pejorative connotation that rhetoric is a means of obscuring the truth. |
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The racial descriptor does not seem to have originated as a pejorative, but acquired a negative connotation over time. |
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Even the way the document was written was highly pejorative, as it gave the impression that there were two tiers of evaluators. |
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On the whole, the relationship was described in pejorative terms. |
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The only distinct era in American history to have a pejorative title, the Gilded Age came to be remembered as a time of corrupt and issueless politics. |
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The term rotten borough is sometimes used as a pejorative epithet for electorates used to gain political leverage. |
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The Liberals make a big thing of a pejorative word called racism. |
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The word showbiz is a slightly pejorative diminutive of show-business, referring to the acting profession, but more specifically people concerned with variety artistes. |
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That actually worries me because I don't mean this to be a pejorative or ideological exercise. On the other hand, I can't simply abandon the maniacal spasms of the left to which I am normally addicted. |
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The second thing I want to point out is there are comments made about the service sector which unfortunately are very pejorative and in fact are incorrect. |
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It should also consider proper mechanisms to rescue that much abused term from those who use it as a pejorative term for any dissent from their policies. |
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The manner in which the evidence was gathered or treated, e.g. inappropriate dissemination of a witness statement, can have a pejorative effect on its admissibility or its probative value in a criminal trial. |
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The emphasis on data and transparency provides pressure for improvement without judging or evaluating performance through pejorative measures or practices. |
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By opting for a grey habit, Marguerite d'Youville appropriated the somewhat pejorative nickname that some people had given to the nuns in her congregation. |
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From there they give to the dietetic word a pejorative direction. |
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In particular, States should act to stop the public use of derogatory or pejorative names and terms and should take steps to counteract negative stereotypes. |
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In many segments of academia, meanwhile, Marxism became a cheapshot pejorative. |
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However, state authorities would be well advised to forgo using this term since there is no legal definition of it3 and it has an excessively pejorative connotation. |
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Better still, equate it with permissive, a highly emotive and pejorative term in our present society. |
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Clarkson referring to people of different races in pejorative terms tells children that it is ok to bully and make racist comments. |
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The analogy is based on the idea that pejorative slurs are used to express both a descriptive belief and a negative attitude. |
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The Dutch called Hottentots, a term that has now come to be regarded as pejorative. |
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Some Sami regard these as pejorative terms, while others accept at least the name Lappland. |
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The word slavery is often used as a pejorative to describe any activity in which one is coerced into performing. |
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Today, the term Indies might be considered pejorative, patronizing and oppressive by some. |
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Some prefer it to the adjective artificial, as this term may be perceived as pejorative. |
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Pronounced slightly differently, it is the word for the color black, and is rarely perceived as a pejorative. |
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The term casuistry quickly became pejorative with Blaise Pascal's attack on the misuse of casuistry. |
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In Spanish the word joke is not at all pejorative, it is playful. |
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The meaning implied by the label has never been accepted by conventional medicine and is considered pejorative. |
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The word is also used in a pejorative manner by critics of this type of political rule. |
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Burnet was a bishop chronicling how England became Protestant, and his use of the term is invariably pejorative. |
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Considered archaic or pejorative, the term Scotch has also been used for Scottish people, primarily outside Scotland. |
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The pejorative sense of the term, labelling a flawed or disingenuous work of historiography, is found in another 1815 attestation. |
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The term brostep has been used by some as a slight pejorative descriptor for a style of popular Americanised dubstep. |
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It is currently used in an almost exclusively pejorative context and is often coupled with the term 'extremist,' giving it an even more negative slant. |
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However, the word was coined by the Roundheads as a pejorative propaganda image of a licentious, hard drinking and frivolous man, who rarely, if ever, thought of God. |
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Without being pejorative, figures of this type tend to follow a derivative of Parkinson's law, expanding to fit the available space on the balance sheet. |
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Due to this pejorative sense, some scholars opted for the term mythos. |
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The linguist Robert Ramsey illustrates the pejorative connotations of fan. |
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It meant simply 'foreign, foreigner' without any pejorative meaning. |
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As in the Scandinavian languages, lappalainen is often considered archaic or pejorative, and saamelainen is used instead, at least in official contexts. |
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The Bahau subgroups of the Bulungan regions are also called Ngorek, although this seems to be a pejorative exonym given to them by the neighboring Kenyah. |
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This term is used there not only in a historical context, but also as a somewhat pejorative word to describe Swiss speakers of Italian and French. |
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Pejorative terms are used to fuel mistrust between people and to justify cuts which will drive hundreds of thousands of people further into poverty. |
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