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"reproachful" Definitions
  1. expressing blame or criticism

69 Sentences With "reproachful"

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

The crime begets a reproachful whisper that will not be stilled.
" Others have hectored the public with reproachful questions: "Friends With Benefits?
Meanwhile, the American Jewish Committee, a premiere communal agency, has taken a reproachful stance.
Well, why would someone make such a solemn, self-reproachful fuss about a bad back?
If I skip our usual morning jog, my dogs flop onto the floor, disconsolate and reproachful.
Three of them sent a reproachful "secret" memo to the Élysée, published last weekend in Le Monde.
On Wednesday afternoon, Ekstra Bladet published a temperate story, beneath a photograph of Marius looking sweetly reproachful.
Some French members of the crowd began to shout "Allez!" in a manner that was more reproachful than supportive.
Two-way audio talkback lets you carry on a conversation (or deliver a reproachful "No!" to that naughty pup).
Men on late night have always been slightly wary and almost reproachful of women, as if we're glittery komodo dragons.
Attempts at delivering quality products haven't always been successful, and some marketing attempts have been reproachful (see "silent purchase coupons").
What is clear — very clear — is that everyone here is possessed by thoughts of mortality and reproachful recollections of their dearly departed.
Much of the island's interior was reduced to sickly scrub; along its roads stand skeletal trees, reproachful witnesses to the ravages they endured.
As he explained, when he became a television personality, the reproachful notes and the pounding on his floor from the room below magically ceased.
Brenda Mhlongo is seated on a plush couch in a television studio, rehearsing her reproachful stare while a makeup artist touches up her face.
And this ghostly, reproachful recitation of Brooks's elegy to doomed youth shatters the composure of a woman for whom self-possession is as essential as oxygen.
Mr Roulet found that the more disapproval a bank earned—measured by the density of reproachful words in articles about it—the more fees it earned too.
It's a shame to see Paquin in a Scorsese movie without anything more to do than issue reproachful looks, but at least that neglect is thematically appropriate.
This is not a stretch, as anyone who has ever encountered the dim gaze of deer standing by a country road knows how weirdly reproachful it can feel.
His face was expectant — and a little reproachful, as though I'd stopped reading just before the end of a rollicking good story and was deliberately keeping everyone in suspense.
The "you" in the film's title is therefore a reproachful son addressing an absent father, but it is also meant for the audience, bombarded with ideas and stories of the past.
"I was pretty conflicted about doing that, not so much from an ideological standpoint as just from a personal sense of sense of security," Chapman explains, ever the self-reproachful frontman.
These acute exegeses stand in reproachful contrast to the occasionally lumpy quality of the book's capsule surveys of intellectual history; like many a survey course, this one can feel at once cursory and undigested.
And so we have the marketing landscape as we know it now, courtesy of Dove: gentle, millennial pink, and passive-aggressively reproachful of women who have allowed themselves to feel bad about their bodies.
Bundling was essentially laughed out of business after a lengthy ballad decrying the method — and the women who, as the song said, "follow that reproachful practice" — was published in a widely circulated almanac in 1785.
Recently, the celebrated writer Philippe Sollers wrote a reproachful open letter to the mayor of Bordeaux, reflecting the anxiety coursing through the region and protesting what some saw as audacity in changing the names of historic chateaus.
But the varnish doesn't quite disguise the hopeful, bewildered young man he will become as his life — to borrow from F. Scott Fitzgerald, who knew from fame and disenchantment — is borne back ceaselessly into a reproachful past.
Senior White House aide Kellyanne Conway asked a reporter what his ethnicity was during a reproachful exchange outside the White House on Tuesday as Conway defended President Donald Trump's racist tweets last weekend about four lawmakers of color.
Originally written as a blog in the choppy dialect of Osaka, Japan's freewheeling western city, the novella put working-class women at its core: Makiko, an ageing hostess obsessed with her sagging boobs, and Midoriko, her reproachful teenage daughter.
Speaking in self-reproachful terms of having lived life "with the handbrake on," Mr. Strong's fearful Donald sounds like a 1969 Connecticut equivalent of Chekhov's abject Uncle Vanya, whose play Mr. Icke directed at the Almeida Theater earlier this year.
Small dramas acquire the status of rumbling storms: the fate of the young couple's romance; the thwarted lesbian desire of a society prig for Tim's sister, a renowned poet; the need of Sara's brother and sister to break away from the reproachful perfection that suffocates them.
" An account of a ménage à trois — involving Paul, Stewart and our narrator — that apparently ended really badly, it is steeped in the rueful, reproachful nostalgia of a certain poetic breed of gay fiction that flourished four decades ago, most memorably in Andrew Holleran's "Dancer From the Dance.
Unknown artist, Cherokee, "Pipe Bowl" (19th century), stone, Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology, Harvard University, Gift of the Heirs of David Kimball, 99-12-323/53119 (photo courtesy Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology, PM# 99-12-10/53119 [digital file 60740101]; © President and Fellows of Harvard College)Indeed, one of the great contributions of this exhibition is the reproachful realities it brings to light, the academic roots of racism.
Fleeing Northern Ireland after realizing she was pregnant, 19-year-old Taryn finds refuge with her aunt Kim in Baltimore. She is parting ways with her partner, Bill, under the reproachful gaze of their daughter Abby.
Elizabeth continued to appeal to Feodor in half appealing, half reproachful letters. She proposed an alliance, something which she had refused to do when offered one by Feodor's father, but was turned down.Crankshaw, Edward, Russia and Britain, Collins, The Nations and Britain series.
Stolzius arrives, and the officers make insinuating remarks about Marie's relationship with Desportes. Tumult. Intermezzo Scene 2 (Capriccio, Corale e Ciacona II): Marie has received a reproachful letter from Stolzius. She is reading it in tears when Desportes enters. He scornfully dictates to her a brusque reply.
The reproachful, plaintive question "why" of suffering (verse 2) in the 22nd Psalm touches the deepest sense of godforsakenness in the face of suffering and multiple persecution by enemies.Dörte Bester (2007). Körperbilder in den Psalmen: Studien zu Psalm 22 und verwandten Texten. (= Band 24 von Forschungen zum Alten Testament).
His show features 12 large photographs printed on vinyl, with highlight added using acrylic ink. Nyein Chan Su’s artwork Spirituality in High Spirits is on display in Burma’s commercial capital, a series of acrylic and canvas renditions each turn on its head the traditional depiction of nats as foreboding and reproachful figures.
Reformador ecuatoriano de la Ilustración, p. 76-77 In 1779, a reproachful and satirical manuscript was circulated, the El nuevo Luciano de Quito (The New Lucian of Quito), signed by "don Javier de Cía, Apéstegui y Perochena," a pseudonym for Espejo. This work imitated the satire of Lucian, and was especially unsympathetic to the Jesuits.
Her tragic story makes one of the Love Romances of Parthenius of Nicaea.Parthenius, 4. Ovid includes an imagined reproachful letter from Oenone to Paris in his collection Heroides,Heroides v. a text that has been extended by a number of spurious post-Ovidian interpolations, which include a rape of Oenone by Apollo that is nowhere confirmed in other sources.
He died, however, not long after arriving in England; Fuller then completed Dowling's commission. Lady Loch became her patron. Other early portraits followed: two pictures of homeless children, entitled Weary (inspired by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's poem on child labour "Weariness") and Desolate, in 1888; and Gently Reproachful circa 1889. Weary was acquired by the Art Gallery of New South Wales in 2015.
She was, as always, very firm in her views and convinced of her own infallibility. In April 1792, the war so fervently desired by the Girondins broke out. Madame Roland wrote a reproachful letter to Robespierre because he still opposed the idea. This led to the end of the friendly relations between Robespierre and the Rolands; eventually he would become a sworn enemy of the Girondins and of Madame Roland.
During this campaign, members of the group Campaign Life distributed leaflets attacking Stackhouse as a "babykiller" because he supported abortion in some circumstances. He described this attack as "disgusting and reproachful", adding "That kind of personal attack by design has no part in a democracy." The Campaign Life campaign had endorsed Wappel, who opposed abortion under all circumstances. Stackhouse returned to teaching theology and philosophy after leaving parliament.
The countless couplets of Our culture had a particularly big success. Many actors included them into their repertoires with the author’s consent and also repeatedly “stole” them. The reproachful chorus of this song (“Here’s the fruits of education, here’s our culture!”) was used by different authors to create renewed versions of the late 1920s. During 1915–1917, many of Savoyarov’s topical songs were notable for satirical and political jokes.
He still desires her more than anything. She, however, is reproachful of his arrogant and destructive possessiveness and accuses him of having broken his promises and leaving her. She drugs him with a rare herb called "Mexican mushroom", then performs oral sex on an approaching black local while he is watching, immobilized by the drug. Liza, realising Mark has left her without even a message, books a flight back for the next day.
His chapter concluded, :It may be said that to take advantage of a man's credulity, to exploit his misapprehensions, to capitalize on his ignorance is morally reprehensible—and this may well be the case. [. . .] Where, then does the author of this chapter stand on these difficult and reproachful questions? I do not quite know—and I am neither contented nor arrogant in that unsatisfactory answer. But this should be said: a strategy is an instrument for winning.
Eduardo finds out, and also notices the huge resemblance to Michael, who he hides in his house. Jorge Anselmo quickly befriends the family butler, but Eugenia turns reproachful, saying it is unacceptable that "a disgusting boy" is allowed to live at home. Rosario does not support the sordid atmosphere of the reformatory and thanks to the help of Dr. Alberto Junquera resigns and goes to work in his office. Soon thereafter, she meets Eduardo and falls 💘 in love with him.
He announces to all guests that Cicero (Miguel Romulus), the bride's brother is dead and that the account responsible for this is the Herculaneum captain. The coronelzinho takes the opportunity to reveal to the entire city of Brogodó that Jesuíno is the son of the most feared bandit of the region. Jesuíno if constrains and face the reproachful eyes of those present. Eusebius and Virtuous mourn the death of his son and son in law blame the misfortune that has just befall their lives.
Abbahu had two sons, Zeira and Hanina. Some writers ascribe to him a third son, Abimi.Bacher, Agada der Babylonischen Amoräer Abbahu sent Hanina to the academy at Tiberias, where he himself had studied, but the youth occupied himself with the burial of the dead, and on hearing of this, the father sent him a reproachful message in this laconic style: "Is it because there are no graves in CaesareaCompare Exodus 14:11 that I have sent you off to Tiberias? Study must precede practice".
The lyrics are ambiguous and deal with parents-children relationships. It is both a love and reproachful song towards the two parents : a version for the mother and one for the father, but it is unknown whether the song is blaming the parents or thanking them. However, some verses clearly refer to incest: it is evoked through an allegory ("petit bouton de rose, aux pétales humides un baiser je dépose") and a phonetic pun ("tes câlins cessent toute ecchymose").Royer, 2008, pp. 121-22.
81 John Ogilby even has the fly speak up in its own defence in his Aesopics: the reproachful "rustick" should be grateful for the lasting lesson not to leave himself uncovered to attack in future.John Ogilby, Aesopics or a second collection of fables (1668), Fable X, p.23 In the following century, William Somervile reinterpreted the fly as a nuisance-making demagogue who can safely be ignored by an aristocratic “Senate” in his poetic version of the fable, “The bald- pated Welchman and the Fly”.Occasional Poems, 1727, pp.
The Son discovers that the bushes and yards in the neighbourhood are thick with corpses at night, and finally discovers his own Dead Father amongst these corpses. Taking out a spoon, the Son eats his Dead Father, digging into the flesh of his belly, until the Dead Father wakes and fixes the Son with a reproachful stare. The Son then helps his Dead Father recover from the ordeal. The Dead Father, seeing the problems he has caused for the family by his return, leads the Son to the attic.
Ned, after a few days' consideration, replies: he is slightly reproachful and does not volunteer to return to Stickleford; agreeing to marry her, he suggests that she comes to London on the train, the railway line being now open. She arrives, with a girl aged about three; they are wet after the journey in the rain in an open carriage. Ned, initially displeased by the unexpected presence of Car'line's daughter, acquiesces to the situation. They get married, visiting the Exhibition after they come back from church; their married life is comfortable.
The Justice Department also announced that the execution would be postponed for one month for the defense to review the documents. On June 6, federal judge Richard Paul Matsch ruled the documents would not prove McVeigh innocent and ordered the execution to proceed. McVeigh invited conductor David Woodard to perform pre-requiem Mass music on the eve of his execution; while reproachful of McVeigh's capital wrongdoing, Woodard consented.Siletti, M. J., Sounding the last mile: Music and capital punishment in the United States since 1976, doctoral dissertation under the tutelage of Prof.
The idea of mutual deceit has been used during the ancient times. Homer and Hesiod, for example, cited it along with theft and adultery to describe the attributes of the Greek gods that men found reproachful. These were evident in the way the gods mistreated each other, a position that was also noted by Plato as part of his criticism of the poets in the Republic. Blaise Pascal also used mutual deceit to describe human society, citing man's capability for "disguise, falsehood, and hypocrisy both in himself and in regard to others".
The Qur'an explains how one can achieve the state of the satisfied soul in sura Ar-Ra'd: "Those who believe, and whose hearts find their rest in the remembrance of God – for, verily, in the remembrance of Allah do hearts find satisfaction (tatmainnu alquloobu)." Once the seeker can successfully transcend the reproachful soul, the process of transformation concludes with nafs-al-mutma'inna (soul at peace). However, for some Sufis orders the final stage is nafs-as-safiya wa kamila (soul restful and perfected in Allah's presence). The term is conceptually synonymous with Tasawwuf, Islah al-Batini etc.
In six movements, the last, contrapuntal movement proved to be very difficult for both the performers and the audience at its premiere in March 1826 (again by the Schuppanzigh Quartet). Beethoven was persuaded by the publisher Artaria, for an additional fee, to write a new finale, and to issue the last movement as a separate work (the Grosse Fugue, Op. 133). Beethoven's favourite was the last of this series, the quartet in C minor Op. 131, which he rated as his most perfect single work. Beethoven's relations with his nephew Karl had continued to be stormy; Beethoven's letters to him were demanding and reproachful.
American Catholics, who by the year 1900 were 12 million people and had a predominantly Irish clergy,William D'Antonio, 2001 American Catholics AltaMira Press page 1 objected to what they considered the reproachful terms Popish and Romish and preferred the term Roman Catholic.Israel Rupp, 1861 Religious denominations in the United States of America, Desilver Publishers, Philadelphia, p. 137. In the early 20th century, the use of "Roman Catholic" continued to spread in the United States and Canada to refer to individuals, parishes, and their schools. For instance, the 1915 Report of the Commissioner of Education of the United States had a specific section for "Roman Catholic Parish Schools".
The lyrics begin with a promise of protection and caretaking: "You'll be given love / You'll be taken care of / You'll have to trust it". The song moves towards a more reproachful tone as Björk sings, "You just ain't receiving / Your phone is off the hook / Your doors are shut", tempered by the recognition that you have to "twist your head around you" because "love is all around you". This is musically effected by Björk's vocals as she sings the lyric "All is full of love" in counterpoint with herself. The album version of the track does not have drum accompaniment and portrays an ambient song.
Canopus is Wunmba (stupid or deaf): it seems strange > that the star which the Arabs regard as the eye of the Divine Majesty should > be thus designated; but perhaps the very beauty of the star, tempting the > people to invoke aid which was not granted, provoked them to call the > charmer who would not listen to their entreaties by this reproachful name. > The star is fair to the sight, but "wumba" to the prayers of the Murri. > Antares is Guddar (a lizard). In the tail of the Scorpion, two bright stars > across the Milky-way are called gigeriga (small green parrots) The long dark > space between two branches of the Milky-way near Scorpio, is called > Wurrawilbūrū (demon).
Hill, 2007, pp. 316–318 The first stone of the new Pugin-Barry design was laid on 27 April 1840. During the competition for the design of the new Houses of Parliament, Decimus Burton, 'the land's leading classicist', was vituperated with continuous invective, which Guy Williams has described as an 'anti-Burton campaign', by the foremost advocate of the neo-gothic style, Augustus W. N. Pugin, who was made enviously reproachful that Decimus "had done much more than Pugin's father (Augustus Charles Pugin) to alter the appearance of London". Pugin attempted to popularize advocacy of the neo-gothic, and repudiation of the neoclassical, by composing and illustrating books that contended the supremacy of the former and the degeneracy of the latter, which were published from 1835.
" Mendelsohn said that while the song was a "slightly lesser chapter in the ongoing story of McCartney as facile romanticist", "it might have eventually begun to grow on one as unassumingly charming" without Spector's "oppressive mush". In 1973, musicologist and critic Wilfrid Mellers wrote: "The music has a tremendous expectancy … Whether or no Paul approved of the plush scoring of 'The Long and Winding Road', it works not because it guys the feeling but because the feeling has integrity." MacDonald said: "With its heart-breaking suspensions and yearning backward glances from the sad wisdom of the major key to the lost loves and illusions of the minor, 'The Long and Winding Road' is one of the most beautiful things McCartney ever wrote. Its words, too, are among his most poignant, particularly the reproachful lines of the brief four-bar middle section.
Fragments of a papyrus roll of the Phaedrus from the 2nd century AD After Phaedrus concedes that this speech was certainly better than any Lysias could compose, they begin a discussion of the nature and uses of rhetoric itself. After showing that speech making itself isn't something reproachful, and that what is truly shameful is to engage in speaking or writing shamefully or badly, Socrates asks what distinguishes good from bad writing, and they take this up. Phaedrus claims that to be a good speechmaker, one does not need to know the truth of what he is speaking on, but rather how to properly persuade, persuasion being the purpose of speechmaking and oration. Socrates first objects that an orator who does not know bad from good will, in Phaedrus's words, harvest "a crop of really poor quality".
Dr Foy stressed the Goodwin decision where the European Court of Human Rights had found that the UK had breached the rights of a transgender woman, including her right to marry. McKechnie J was very reproachful of the government in his judgment and asserted that, because there is no express provision in the Civil Registration Act, which was enacted after the Goodwin decision, it must be questioned as to whether the State deliberately refrained from adopting any remedial measures to address the ongoing problems. He emphasised that Ireland is very much isolated within the member states of the Council of Europe with regards to these matters. The judge concluded that by reason of the absence of any provision which would enable the acquired identity of Dr Foy to be legally recognised in this jurisdiction, the state is in breach of its positive obligations under Art 8 of the Convention.
The thug returns the child but she realizes that she has no choice but to submit to him. While living with the thug, she secretly stashes her nights’ earnings behind a hole in the wall, in order to provide her son with an education. When the son becomes of age, she enrolls him in school. But soon after, the parents learn that the boy’s mother is a prostitute and they send reproachful letters to the school, complaining that they cannot allow their children to study together with a child from a disreputable background. Without a choice, the principal pays a visit to the goddess’ home to investigate the accusations of her profession, but the rumors prove to be true. As he sets his mind on expelling the boy, he is swayed by the mother’s genuine love for her son and her heartfelt cries of why her son cannot receive what is best for him, due to her depraved background.
The commissioners subsequently appointed Pugin to assist in the construction of the interior of the new Palace, to the design of which Pugin himself had been the foremost determiner. The first stone of the new Pugin-Barry design was laid on 27 April 1840, by Barry's wife Sarah (née Rowsell). During the competition for the design of the new Houses of Parliament, Decimus Burton was vituperated with continuous invective, which Guy Williams has described as an 'anti-Burton campaign', by the foremost advocate of the neo-gothic style, Augustus W. N. Pugin, who was made enviously reproachful that Decimus 'had done much more that Pugin's father (Augustus Charles Pugin) to alter the appearance of London'. Pugin attempted to popularize advocacy of the neo- gothic, and repudiation of the neoclassical, by composing and illustrating books that contended the supremacy of the former and the degeneracy of the latter, which were published from 1835.
As both superior of the missions and bishop, Carroll instituted a series of broad reforms in the Church, especially regarding the conduct of the clergy. He promoted the use of vernacular languages in the liturgy, but was unable to gain the support for such reform by the church hierarchy. In 1787 he wrote: > Can there be anything more preposterous than an unknown tongue; and in this > country either for want of books or inability to read, the great part of our > congregations must be utterly ignorant of the meaning and sense of the > public office of the Church. It may have been prudent, for aught I know, to > impose a compliance in this matter with the insulting and reproachful > demands of the first reformers; but to continue the practice of the Latin > liturgy in the present state of things must be owing either to chimerical > fears of innovation or to indolence and inattention in the first pastors of > the national Churches in not joining to solicit or indeed ordain this > necessary alteration.
In the prologue, Diodorus identifies reproachful criticism (blasphemia) as the punishment for evil deeds which people take to heart the most and which the powerful are especially subject to. Powerful men, therefore, should avoid evil deeds in order to avoid receiving this reproach from posterity. Diodorus claims that the central subjects of the book are negative examples, who demonstrate the truth of these remarks. The book is again divided into Greek and Sicilian narratives. The Greek narrative covers the thirty tyrants of Athens (3-6, 32-33), the establishment and souring of the Spartan hegemony (10-13, 17, 34–36, 38), Cyrus the Younger's attempt to seize the Persian throne with the aid of the Ten Thousand (19-31), Agesilaus' invasion of Persian Asia Minor (79-80), the Boeotian War (81-86, 91–92, 94). The Sicilian narrative focusses on Dionysios the Elder's establishment of his tyranny in Sicily (7-9, 11–16, 18), his second war with the Carthaginians (41-78, 85–91, 95-96), and his invasion of southern Italy (100-108, 111-112).
New York: Scribner, 1997; However she was prevented from marrying the Grand Duke as the Russian Orthodox Church forbade the marriage of first cousins. Although such marriages had been allowed previously in the House of Romanov (Grand Duchess Catherine Pavlovna, whose hand was denied to Napoleon I, was twice allowed to wed first cousins; her descendants became the Russian branch of the Dukes of Oldenburg), the devout Nicholas II, official head of Russia's church, refused to relax the rules for the sake of his brother. In November 1903, Michael wrote to Beatrice telling her that he could not marry her. The situation was aggravated by a letter Beatrice then received from her elder sister Victoria Melita ("Ducky"), in which Michael was blamed for having callously initiated the doomed romance (when, a couple of years later Ducky, having divorced her first cousin Ernest Louis, Grand Duke of Hesse, was told that remarriage to another first cousin, Grand Duke Kirill Vladimirovich, would likewise be forbidden by the Tsar, she refused to take no for an answer; the couple eloped into exile). The humiliated Beatrice was sent to Egypt to recover from heartbreak, but pined and wrote reproachful letters to Michael until 1905.

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