scurrilousness

Definition of scurrilousnessnext
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Example Sentences

Recent Examples of Synonyms for scurrilousness
Noun
  • Years later, drawn into a covert network of operatives and manipulated through a web of corruption, Clay must decide whether to become the weapon he was shaped to be or dismantle the system from within.
    Alex Ritman, Variety, 28 Apr. 2026
  • He was also charged in another foreign corruption case in the same court in late 2024.
    Jay Weaver, Miami Herald, 28 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • Some lambasted the degeneracy of the modern language.
    Big Think, Big Think, 22 Apr. 2026
  • Eric Swalwell, a prominent Democratic House member and a front-runner in the race for California governor, had his political career blown up by allegations of degeneracy and abject stupidity.
    Michelle Cottle, Mercury News, 16 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • But there’s more to it than gleeful perversions of genre.
    Carolina A. Miranda, The Atlantic, 5 Mar. 2026
  • This garish cavalcade of perversions, which just premiered at the Berlin Film Festival, should have been shocking and transgressive; the pieces are certainly there.
    Bilge Ebiri, Vulture, 15 Feb. 2026
Noun
  • Chicago police are searching for a man wanted in an act of public indecency on a CTA 'L' train in Chicago's Lincoln Park neighborhood.
    Elyssa Kaufman, CBS News, 23 Apr. 2026
  • That has given the agency the legal ability to regulate such things as indecency and obscenity, as well as commercials in children’s programming.
    Ted Johnson, Deadline, 20 Mar. 2026
Noun
  • In detectors filled with liquid argon, the decay of this isotope creates signals that can look deceptively similar to the ones scientists are searching for.
    Rupendra Brahambhatt, Interesting Engineering, 25 Apr. 2026
  • Some formulas can remove surface stains caused by coffee, smoking or wine, while others address tougher stains caused by decay, age or genetics.
    BestReviews, Chicago Tribune, 24 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • But does the vitality mask the squalor or the squalor the vitality?
    SPIN Team, SPIN, 20 Apr. 2026
  • And while these tenants paid their rent month after month, some of them up to $900 a month to live in squalor.
    Nikki DeMentri, CBS News, 20 Apr. 2026
Noun
  • And the principle remains that representing a malefactor isn’t, ipso facto, an act of malefaction.
    Kwame Anthony Appiah, New York Times, 28 Sep. 2022
  • A pitch-framing specialist with rare agility behind the plate, Wolters must coax pitchers through Coors Field and its occasional malefactions.
    Orange County Register, Orange County Register, 1 Apr. 2017
Noun
  • Her paintings preserve a child’s unguarded but uncomprehending view of depravity.
    Ben Davis, The New York Review of Books, 25 Apr. 2026
  • Taken together, this network continues to expose the depravity of what these women endured, and to demand accountability from a society that has closed its eyes to the horrors for far too long.
    Pramila Jayapal, Time, 15 Apr. 2026
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“Scurrilousness.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/scurrilousness. Accessed 3 May. 2026.

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