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16 Sentences With "malignantly"

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

Death hasn't malignantly overhauled him in a "Pet Sematary" sense, but it has affected his spirit.
"We are here because we don't want to believe that dark forces can laugh malignantly in the world we inhabit."
The plaintiffs have demanded a jury trial to determine if they were willfully and malignantly misled by these potato chips.
"A city once famously neurotic is becoming malignantly narcissistic," Moss writes, in one of many descriptions that sum up the state of affairs with an efficient wisdom.
"The worst crime for which he can never be pardoned is that he dared malignantly hurt the dignity of the supreme leadership of (North Korea)," the Rodong Sinmun commentary said.
Many—too many—of the artists seize on easy ironies of mediated information (televised spectacle as somehow malignantly manipulative rather than banal), tendentious incongruities (the artist Martha Rosler's well-known montages of sinister soldiers in battle array and of upper-class women vamping in deluxe homes prove what, exactly?), and fixate on remotely deployed weaponry (as if this were any more reprehensible than dealing death with clubs and knives).
Its malignantly narcissistic beliefs are held in compensation for Gil's own sense of personal vulnerability before the requirements of social duty, the same which have denied him the opportunity to live as he wanted.
Next to the two above mentioned switching systems many other switching systems are known in C. albicans. A second example occurs in Melanoma, where malignantly transformed pigment cells switch back-and-forth between phenotypes of proliferation and invasion in response to changing microenvironments, driving metastatic progression.
Patients exhibit rapid increases in lymphadenopathy, spleen size, and blood cell numbers, some cells of which take on the appearance of immature and/or malignant cells. Their disease soon thereafter escalates to an angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma, peripheral T cell lymphoma, Anaplastic large-cell lymphoma (which unlike most lymphomas of this type is Anaplastic lymphoma kinase-negative), or Cutaneous T cell lymphoma. The malignantly transformed disease is aggressive and has a poor prognosis. Recommended treatment includes chemotherapy with Fludarabine, Cladribine, or the CHOP combination of drugs followed by bone marrow transplantation.
Almost all the offences under the IPC are qualified by one or other words such as 'wrongful gain or loss', 'dishonesty', 'fraudulently', 'reason to believe', 'criminal knowledge or intention', 'intentional cooperation', 'voluntarily', 'malignantly', 'wantonly', 'maliciously'. All these words indicate the blameworthy mental condition required at the time of commission of the offence, nowhere found in the IPC, its essence is reflected in almost all the provisions of the Indian Penal Code 1860. Every offence created under the IPC virtually imports the idea of criminal intent or mens rea in some form or other.
He did so by varying dietary deficiencies and through his work discovered that vitamin D can be used to prevent rickets. This work, along with that done by Dr. E.V. McCollum, Dr. Simmonds and Dr. Shipley, led to a total of 23 publications over a brief fifteen-month period. Park's other research interests were reflected in his study of bone structure where growth has been malignantly halted by illness. Through x-ray examinations, he discovered that bone growth proceeds horizontally so that a dense horizontal line of bone builds up during a disease phase, despite the cartilage arrest.
A New York Times article from March 14, 2010, says that Talmadge > is misremembered, having inspired two unfair caricatures that have lived on > in a pair of popular films. In Singin' in the Rain (1952), she is parodied > as Lina Lamont ... More malignantly, Billy Wilder used Norma Talmadge as the > obvious if unacknowledged source of Norma Desmond, the grotesque, predatory > silent movie queen of his 1950 film Sunset Boulevard. However, neither of these identifications is in the mainstream of critical opinion. Nearly all other writers regard both Norma Desmond and Lina Lamont as fictional composite characters, each mirroring some aspects of various faded silent stars, but neither of them primarily a disguised portrait of anyone in particular.
In surveying some noted literary works embodying what he describes as "malignantly perverse attitudes", such as by Paul Verlaine, Dostoevski, Marquis de Sade, Baudelaire and Swinburne (some associated with the Decadent movement), he suggests that it might be a form of psychopathy, and might appeal to similarly disordered people or to "new cults of intellectual defeatists and deviates" such as certain avant garde groups. However he concludes that such artworks and sexual deviations are more likely due to schizoid disorder with misanthropy and life perversion, whereas the "true psychopath" would not labor to produce art extolling pathologic or perverse attitudes; on the contrary, they would tend to superficially proclaim belief in a normal, moral life. However, Cleckley then suggests that initial potential for greatness and emotional depth may cause problems, such as being more affected by problems in life, that then leads into psychopathy.
" The Blade, another Republican paper, agreed, writing, "The fight against Mr. Hanna was the most malignantly traitorous contest ever waged in the political annals of Ohio." The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Silver Democratic paper, argued, "The Republican contingent which stuck to the last against Hanna has made a record which the victorious faction might well envy ... Their fight was ... against the chairman of the national committee and all its forces and resources; against the president of the United States, with his tremendous party influence and more influential patronage. Against all this they have cut down the man who a year ago was, next to the president, the leading Republican of the United States, to a pitiful majority of one in his ambition to be elected to the Senate, and that obtained under circumstances not creditable to him. They chased him so hard that he dare not stop to have the gravest charges investigated.
Any tame animal permitted willfully or carelessly to go on a neighbor's land, and which does mischief by knocking things over with its body, or by dragging them along by means of its hair, tail, harness, bridle, or yoke, or by the burden which it carries, or by rubbing against a post or wall, is a derivative of the "ox", while an animal breaking down a post or wall by rubbing against it, or defiling grain or grass with its excrements, is a derivative of the "chewer." But striking with the body, or malignantly biting, or crouching on something, or kicking, is treated on the same principle as "goring". Chickens, dogs, cats, and even hogs are named among the animals for which the owner is made liable. Derivatives of the "pit" are a stone, knife, burden, or a mound; in short, anything over which one can stumble or from which one can receive injury if left in the open, that is, on the highway or on common lands.
According to the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition: Andrew Dickson White wrote in Seven Great Statesmen in the Warfare of Humanity with Unreason (1915): > TURGOT...I present today one of the three greatest statesmen who fought > unreason in France between the close of the Middle Ages and the outbreak of > the French Revolution – Louis XI and Richelieu being the two other. And not > only this: were you to count the greatest men of the modern world upon your > fingers, he would be of the number – a great thinker, writer, administrator, > philanthropist, statesman, and above all, a great character and a great man. > And yet, judged by ordinary standards, a failure. For he was thrown out of > his culminating position, as Comptroller-General of France, after serving > but twenty months, and then lived only long enough to see every leading > measure to which he had devoted his life deliberately and malignantly > undone; the flagrant abuses which he had abolished restored, apparently > forever; the highways to national prosperity, peace, and influence, which he > had opened, destroyed; and his country put under full headway toward the > greatest catastrophe the modern world has seen.

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