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7 Sentences With "most derogatory"

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

I have three pages of some of the most derogatory sexual slurs she used against members of the Trump family.
Clinton's campaign has highlighted Trump's most derogatory remarks in TV ads aimed at moderate, suburban women -- a constituency that has helped Republican nominees in years past.
An effective political mission could only come from the U.S. But Germans expect no such thing from a country their political establishment and media ridicule in the most derogatory terms.
That's when Yashar Ali of HuffPost broke the news that Sam Haskell, the chief executive of the Miss America Organization, wrote an email laughing along as Lewis Friedman, the televised pageant's head writer, referred to former crown-holders in the crudest, most derogatory, term for a woman's anatomy.
Níðings had to be scolded, i. e. they had to be shouted in their faces what they were in most derogatory terms, as scolding (Anglo-Saxon scald, Norse skald, Icelandic skalda, OHG scelta, Modern German Schelte; compare scoff, Modern Dutch schelden, Anglo-Saxon scop, and flyting) was supposed to break the concealing seiðr spell and would thus force the fiend to give away its true nature. > The actual meaning of the adjective argr or ragr [Anglo-Saxon earg] was the > nature or appearance of effeminacy, especially by obscene acts. Argr was the > worst, most derogatory swearword of all known to the Norse language.
A study conducted among native Finns found that 90% of research subjects considered the terms ' and ' among the most derogatory epithets for ethnic minorities. In Turkish, ' is the closest equivalent to "negro". The appellation was derived from the Arabic zanj for Bantu peoples. It is usually used without any negative connotation.
During the Edo period, such people were required to live in special buraku and, like the rest of the population, were bound by sumptuary laws based on the inheritance of social class. The Meiji government abolished most derogatory names applied to these discriminated communities in 1871, but the new laws had little effect on the social discrimination faced by the former outcasts and their descendants. The laws, however, did eliminate the economic monopoly they had over certain occupations. The buraku continued to be treated as social outcasts and some casual interactions with the majority caste were perceived taboo until the era after World War II. Estimates of their number range from 2 to 4 million (about 2% to 3% of the national population).

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