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109 Sentences With "frowned on"

How to use frowned on in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "frowned on" and check conjugation/comparative form for "frowned on". Mastering all the usages of "frowned on" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Russell's and Williams' family members also frowned on the verdict.
While times may be changing, Georgia has historically frowned on gambling.
Although frowned on by puritans, it has caused few open ructions.
Wall Street's upper echelon, though, has mostly frowned on the trend.
Big, flashy displays of wealth are frowned on in Silicon Valley.
Meanwhile, channelling government money to boost exports is frowned on in Geneva.
While they were not observant Jews, they had always frowned on converts.
Leaving it off your resume altogether is frowned on by many employers.
For most of American history, gun owners generally frowned on the idea.
It started allowing cremation in 1963 but has always frowned on the practice.
Seeking companionship when we should be "looking after number one" is frowned on.
COLLECTING wild birds' eggs is a hobby, once popular, that is frowned on today.
New York courts have long frowned on attorneys blithely recording their clients without consent.
The Communist government has generally frowned on non-traditional expressions of gender and sexuality.
He was averse to drinking alcohol and frowned on the use of recreational drugs.
And while concerts have started to be held this year, they remain frowned on by clerics.
Local leaders had frowned on the demonstrations and pressured UC Berkeley to end it, Price said.
Salerno typified a more old-fashioned gangster ethic that frowned on flamboyance that might attract attention.
Not surprising, the baseball establishment frowned on Bouton, his collaborating editor, Leonard Shecter, and the book.
Not surprising, the baseball establishment frowned on Bouton, his collaborating editor, Leonard Shecter, and the book.
HUME: On -- in my business, when I came along as a reporter, anonymous sources were frowned on.
The Swiss Protestants John Calvin and Huldrych Zwingli viewed music as sensual temptation and frowned on it.
But before long all use of SMS will be frowned on, as the bolded passage clearly indicates.
Because of their differing backgrounds, their marriage was frowned on; its ending was even less approved of.
Unlike Gustav Mahler, who frowned on the composing ambitions of his wife, Alma, Robert Schumann encouraged Clara.
Unlike Gustav Mahler, who frowned on the composing ambitions of his wife, Alma, Robert Schumann encouraged Clara.
No one actually said the words "too much democracy," a phrase probably frowned on at democracy conferences.
While concerts started to be held this year, concerts and music in general are frowned on by clerics.
" However, many of Ms. Kaneko's voters in Niigata frowned on her use of government vehicles, calling her "privileged.
The practice is frowned on by many Muslims worldwide, and the case was being closely watched in India.
Trump weighed in ages ago, suggesting he frowned on jettisoning former President Andrew Jackson from the $85033 bill (CNN).
My mom ripped his head off of all of our family pictures, and frowned on musicians my entire life.
Yet one consequence of the increased regulation of musical entertainment thereafter was segregation, as moralisers frowned on racial mixing.
The government frowned on the Kraft bid, aware, probably, of the dwindling number of large British firms that are left.
But Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar frowned on that idea during a White House meeting on Monday. Sen.
Why it matters: In the past, regulators have frowned on telecom mergers that would reduce the number of national players.
In a profession that frowned on self-promotion, he was regarded as a publicity-seeking eccentric, if not a crackpot.
It has been successful, and not just because Tinder and other dating apps are banned or severely frowned on here.
Salvadoran soldiers have worked in security since the 1990's, though the practice is frowned on by human rights groups.
The Chinese government has in recent years frowned on anything that could be interpreted as a celebration of ostentatious wealth.
But as a country with large, religious Jewish and Muslim communities, Israel had long frowned on drug use of any kind.
When she launched her cosmetics brand back in 1952, people frowned on it, because well-off families weren't supposed to work.
My health-food-pushing mom always frowned on this practice, warning us kids that the packets contained poison that could cause cancer.
At the Vatican, Pope John Paul II, whose defining experience was resistance to the communist regime in Poland, frowned on liberation theology.
And she frowned on the women who had brought their young sons, who are allowed up to age 8 on the beach.
Ethics experts have long frowned on the idea of senior administration officials with active corporate activities because of potential conflicts of interests.
The court frowned on Mr Ross's original justification for the citizenship question—gathering data to better protect minority voting rights—as a "distraction".
Berman has frowned on the practice, including when he kept Turkish-Iranian gold trader Reza Zarrab locked up over alleged Iran sanctions violations.
" Snow muffles the landscape in this companion to "The Call of the Wild": "Dark spruce forest frowned on either side the frozen waterway.
The New Deal agencies initially encountered resistance from the Supreme Court, which was then, like now, a reactionary institution that frowned on novelty.
The demands of labor kept our eyes looking forward toward the next chore, the next bill, and our stoic culture frowned on self-expression.
Traditionally, venture capitalists frowned on startup founders selling any of their personal stakes in their companies before the firms went public or were acquired.
The merger of T-Mobile and Sprint might help improve 5G coverage, but as for prices ... well, monopolies are frowned on for a reason.
That's not counting the people who try DIY treatments to get rid of earwax, nearly all of which are frowned on by the professionals.
Archbishop Romero's beatification was stalled for years at the Vatican, as many frowned on his association with leftist political views, liberation theology and communism.
Amazon's lax in-app purchasing standards let kids all over the country buy coins and crystals to their hearts' content, something the FTC frowned on.
For much of the post-crisis period, agencies generally frowned on any transaction that might make a bank bigger, more complex and tougher to police.
As the mother of a child in the French educational system, I was aware of how positive reinforcement and encouragement is frowned on in Europe.
Our own Supreme Court has long frowned on prior restraints, and the prior restraints it has struck down share much in common with the website ban.
For the duration of the sit-in, the House chamber, where electronic devices and photographs are frowned on, was awash in selfies, Facebook Live and Periscope.
She was the oldest of nine children in an impoverished family and described her father as a strict man who initially frowned on her acting ambitions.
I never revealed my admiration for Mike Nichols's work on "Virginia Woolf," especially knowing how Edward had frowned on the film's "hopeful" ending, its "sentimental" score.
For instance, what if the European Central Bank bought $50 billion in gold to drive its currency lower, which would normally be frowned on and draw attention.
But according to the progress report, many participants have frowned on the idea of precedents at all: Overall, feedback generally supported some sort of precedent-setting arrangement.
Yet divorce was still frowned on in British society -- and marrying a divorcee whose former spouse was still alive was verboten according to the Church of England.
Oh yes, that's me, I don't have a math brain — though the whole idea of a math brain is frowned on by those who study this topic.
The fact that much of the work deals with officially frowned-on subject matter, including homosexuality, keeps the project marginal even within the contemporary Chinese art world.
In the late 19th and early 20th century, the culture at large may have frowned on the smile, and it took a while to learn to love it.
Association with Cuba's government is often frowned on even though the fierce rhetoric has grown less intense over time, until the din has been nearly drowned out generationally.
The gimmick couldn't last, especially not in a PG era that frowned on blood and kicking other men square in the face in the explicit manner Orton did.
His parents, who were praying at the graves of the dead in the mosque's yard, already turning into a shrine, frowned on their son taking such a souvenir.
Conventional repos allow institutions to lend out assets for short periods to generate liquidity, but this is frowned on by some Islamic scholars who argue it involves charging interest.
This type of borrowing is not uncommon, though it is increasingly frowned on for company executives and board members, because it reduces their effective economic stake in the company.
That social space disappeared after World War II, when the Communist rulers of Czechoslovakia frowned on social networks outside official spheres, and Bratislavans mostly sipped their coffee at home.
The reaction in the news media and in cultural circles was that the government had frowned on a ballet celebrating a gay man who had fled the Soviet Union.
Some black ministers have even frowned on Dr. King for his moral failures as an excuse to avoid the message that he trumpeted as an itinerant preacher for social justice.
Investors frowned on the cloud software company's move to acquire both Carbon Black and Pivotal Software at a grand enterprise value of $4.8 billion, but CNBC's Jim Cramer took a contrarian.
The case comes amid growing awareness of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender issues in China, where society and the government have generally frowned on non-traditional expressions of gender and sexuality.
They belonged to the Worldwide Church of God, which observed a strict Saturday Sabbath, rejected holidays with pagan influence like Christmas, and frowned on too much physical contact on the dance floor.
But his game has improved significantly since he started training with computer software about a year and a half ago, frowned on by many professional shogi players, the Asahi Shimbun daily said.
The campaign staved off potential complaints from social conservatives who have historically frowned on giving incentives to mothers to work outside the home, by vowing to make those caretaker roles tax-deductible.
There is a limit to how much disrobing is permissible, and even the wearing of light garments such as T-shirts, in order to stay cool, is frowned on in some business circles.
Traditionally, Gulf leaders frowned on contact with Israeli government officials, but Otaiba's boss, Mohammed bin Zayed, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi, the most politically important of the emirates, took a different view.
" Jody Williams, who with Rita Sodi owns the West Village restaurant Via Carota and has her own smaller place, Buvette, dislikes talking about policy and prefers to say that "laptops are frowned on.
They also supply paddles and life jackets for those who want to use the canoes that are stashed in the various camping areas, a practice that is officially frowned on by the park.
Casual Western dress wasn't frowned on in Singapore, so long as that meant appalling tourist pastels, striped Lacoste polo shirts, and rack-fresh sports or hip-hop gear, Juicy Couture, and so forth.
That's something that would not -- I don't want to say frowned on, but wouldn't be believable ten years ago, when bankers were considered to be antithetical to democracy even because of President Obama.
Gennady Rozhdestvensky, the Russian conductor who championed an eclectic array of music, including works by Alfred Schnittke and Sofia Gubaidulina at a time when the Soviet establishment frowned on those composers, died on Saturday.
Technically, the term for this kind of editorial move is a retcon (retroactive continuity), and it's usually frowned on by dedicated fans as reminders of the lack of thoughtfulness by writers or comic book companies.
Joe frowned on his stepson's pot use, especially because he and Arlene had two young boys in the house: Leonard, Arlene's son from a previous relationship, and Matua, born to Joe and Arlene in 2008.
In part, this captured an inability to grasp the social nuances of a newsroom, a place where raw ambition is supposed to be politely concealed and where frisking fellow reporters for information and sources is frowned on.
Fred T. Goldberg, who was the I.R.S. commissioner under George Bush, recalled in an interview that the I.R.S. frowned on partnership equity-for-debt swaps for the same reason it objected to corporate stock-for-debt swaps.
Whether it remains available may become an early test of the Trump administration's determination to pare back environmental regulations frowned on by the industry and to retreat from food-safety laws, possibly provoking another clash with the courts.
There is no mention of his ambitions for euro-zone reform, which have stalled owing to the recalcitrance of Germany and other northern states, nor of a "European army", which is frowned on in Poland and the Baltic states.
And, since deserts often host power stations that rely on the renewable but intermittent fuel of sunlight, this might give it quite a comfortable niche in a world where using fossil fuels to generate electricity is increasingly frowned on.
" Mr. Potter, a retiree who once worked in sales and marketing, said he was annoyed that people frowned on the display of the Confederate flag these days, and he liked the fact that Mr. Moore was a "Southern boy.
And because human behavior is at the heart of them, they raise an interesting question: Once we can take people out of the equation, could driving your own car become as socially frowned on as other risky habits, like smoking?
WeChat Discover allows users to find others around them and see recent photos they've taken — it's opt-in, which is good, but it can be filtered by gender, promoting a hookup culture that the team said is frowned on in China.
Infantino has also expressed support for joint bids, which have become common for the European championships, but some in FIFA have frowned on the idea because of the inherent security, logistics and visa issues involved in a tournament spanning international borders.
The idea here is not to put our correspondents center stage but to let them draw on their personal experiences — in a way the old, buttoned-down Times might once have frowned on — to help readers better understand the world.
But attracting the capital and skill to transform Gurao may be more difficult than the daring step taken by a local entrepreneur in 1982 when he opened its first bra factory, at a time when private enterprise was still frowned on in China.
She learned that commissioners frowned on late fees in excess of fifty-five dollars, and that dragging slow-paying tenants to court was usually worth the $89.50 processing fee, because it spurred many of them to find a way to catch up.
It's for the Afro Latinos who have been neglected for far too long; for the English-speaking Latinos who were frowned on; for the DREAMers who were turned away; the Latina mothers who strived for equality or the trans activists who fought for basic humanity.
A student of the culture would tell you that public displays of anger are frowned on in Japan; a demographer would point to the difficult prospects faced by young Japanese, paying for an older generation's lavish health care and benefits that they are unlikely ever to enjoy themselves.
I'm sort of the same age as Frankenthaler, maybe a little younger or older, but you know, there was a world of culture there, and that encouraged, if you got in the right part of it, it was an avant garde world that wasn't frowned on or looked on as crazy.
Ethics dumping is the carrying out by researchers from one country (usually rich, and with strict regulations) in another (usually less well off, and with laxer laws) of an experiment that would not be permitted at home, or of one that might be permitted, but in a way that would be frowned on.
In a place where public protest is frowned on by officials, anxious Singaporeans have been setting up protest groups on Facebook to try and stop the demolition of Pearl Bank and other Brutalist structures, or have been writing impassioned opinion pieces in the state-owned media to try and influence CapitaLand, which is partly owned by the government.
While that trend has drawn some scrutiny — some frowned on the Philadelphia Phillies ace Aaron Nola's recent four-year, $45 million extension, which could end up costing him two free-agent seasons and keep him off the market until his age-31 season — some players seem to have accepted the writing on the wall about future earnings.
Its carbon fiber hull resembles a Jet Ski with wings, and on the water it can basically behave like one too (although that's frowned on in excess, because the spray can wear at the propeller, and if you get crazy with it you risk dipping a wing into the water.) Takeoffs and even landings on sizable bodies of water in good conditions are ridiculously easy, courtesy of that AOA gauge.

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