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95 Sentences With "sneering at"

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

Be really careful when sneering at a man in a diaper.
Yet its leaders may well be sneering at the Russians' heavy hand.
The whole media industry is sneering at Facebook for supposedly screwing them over.
Sick of vegans requesting tofu-based substitutes and sneering at your juice selection?
The solution can't be pining for old neighborhoods, sneering at yuppies, and vilifying social planners.
She's self-reliant and individualistic to a fault, sneering at all those who try to help.
After years of sneering at doting dog owners, why did he suddenly want to become one?
But there's no sneering at teenage ideas of lust or love, or at feeling rejected or insecure.
So instead of the colonial-style sneering at Duterte and the Philippines, perhaps we can learn from them.
So, the contestants will return to Mexico (ostensibly), and get back to sipping margaritas and sneering at each other.
He was disdainful of civilian life, sneering at classmates who wore their shirts untucked or arrived late to class.
Brow-beating, bullying, and sneering at political opponents is no way to motivate men to face the trial of combat.
Partly it's just an excuse for sneering at Democrats, which as I understand it is required by the pundit code.
I interviewed her when the book was released, noting its "calm, fair tone" and lack of sneering at either side.
I thought they were all sneering at me and thinking, 'She's too old and fat, what's that old hag doing here?
They must stop sneering at nationalism, but claim it for themselves and fill it with their own brand of inclusive civic pride.
The crew bar is very cheap, but also full of creepy guys hitting on everyone and insanely gorgeous girls sneering at everyone.
But as I'm sneering at his unseemly display, I am leaning forward, listening intently to see if the next name is mine.
Natural scientists may have to stop sneering at their economist brethren, and recognise that the dismal science is, indeed, a science after all.
Mr. Jefferies may seem like he's sneering at you or wondering at your dimness, but he never seems to be talking down to you.
As they searched, the cops stomped around, sneering at our messy apartment, with one woman saying sarcastically that it belonged in Better Homes and Gardens.
But after Bossi was charged with graft in 2012, sneering at southern corruption sounded hollow and when Salvini took charge in 2013, the strategy evolved.
Critics who have panned the film have been met with fury online, with angry fans sneering at their reviews, their writing and even their motives.
On the Yeah Yeah Yeahs' "Black Tongue" from their searing 2003 debut Fever to Tell, front-person Karen O is combatively—but smartly—sneering at her listeners.
But one woman couldn't believe her ears when she overheard two workers at Superdrug, a health and beauty shop, making rude comments and sneering at her appearance.
He whips through sneering at the gentrification of his Isle of Dogs neighborhood to lamenting last year's revelations of slavery in Libya in the space of minutes.
Miss Manners is surprised that your friend did not anticipate the possibility of expenses during the apprenticeship, but perhaps she was also sneering at your daughter's plans.
There is enough homophobia in the world without a gay man sneering at another gay man's interests, particularly when it's bound up with inferences of being "too camp".
You see people sneering at Barry Manilow for coming out recently—but give the man a break, he's from a different generation, and he's had his own journey.
TOM CONNICK Remember when a Saturday afternoon used to involve little more than loitering outside a prominent high street shop, playing with your fringe and sneering at adults?
"Everywhere Marie Yovanovitch went turned bad," Mr. Trump wrote on Twitter, sneering at her to his 66 million followers while recounting an earlier posting in her diplomatic career.
But trying to keep his campaign going by misleading his supporters is not O.K. And sneering at millions of voters is truly beyond the pale, especially for a progressive.
Then again, those criticisms will come mostly from his left, and he's already turned off a portion of the progressive base by praising the wealthy and sneering at millennials.
Add this to his short (but well-regarded) tenure as CIA director, and anti-Trump elites will have a hard time sneering at the new secretary of State's resume.
"I can't feed my kids with this," said Jesus Gudino, a 29-year-old moto-taxi driver and father of three, sneering at the small plastic bag in his hand.
This is the surprisingly wholesome, traditionalist set of values that sneering at grift inevitably pushes you toward: old-timey rectitude and integrity, honest work and firm handshakes and mutual respect.
We also get a pretty nice money shot of Superman over-the-shoulder sneering at Batman like he's a piece of Bat poop, just before flying off into the night sky.
Well, rather than sneering at the mere sight of a TSA agent, maybe you should be stopping to give them a hug—because there's a good chance that they've seen some crazy shit.
Many viewers were disappointed when the song was changed from a giant, belted number complete with Scar sneering at the hyenas and dramatic steam blasting around him to a speech set to music.
Russia's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, posted a message on Facebook sneering at the European Union for showing solidarity with Britain at a time when London is negotiating its exit from the bloc.
Given that nothing's as strange as the recent past, you'd be forgiven for sneering at the Pacemaker, consigning it to the dustbin of near-history, but there was something noble about Norberg's aim.
"After ordering coffee, the officer noticed that an employee was sneering at her as the employee placed the coffee on the counter," the Coral Springs Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 87 wrote on Facebook.
Any Trump-loving red-blooded American dumbass looking to huff in a bit of the president's residual success while sneering at New York liberals will be disappointed to realize Jamaica Estates is... basically Long Island.
Doctor Ford's agenda seems equally self-contradictory: one moment he seems rhapsodic about sapient robots, and the next, he's sneering at the anthropomorphic sensibilities of an employee who draped a cloth over a naked bot.
Mr. Sonko, who has taken to publicly sneering at his perceived detractors and critics, insists that he inherited an already dysfunctional city and that he would only pay legitimate suppliers upon verification of services offered.
Some Chinese developed a bloated sense of nationalism, belittling Japan; while the Japanese developed a conflictual attitude towards China — marveling at its rapid growth but sneering at its society that is still backward in many aspects.
"I came from a part of Italy with 60 percent youth unemployment, and people who sneer at my background are sneering at thousands of young Italians who are trying to create a future for themselves," he said.
It's an odd form of tribute, as you're basically sneering at the "Five Points of Architecture" (except perhaps the love of supporting pillars), and building a grotesque deformity next to one of 20th-century architecture's arguable masterpieces.
Threatening the U.K. that if it doesn't do a full Brexit it will not get preferential trade treatment from Trump, calling the bloc a "foe" on trade, and sneering at the number of refugees it has admitted.
What's also important to note is that the real-live humans making decisions about working or staying home aren't '80s-era parodies of shoulder-padded working moms sneering at cookie-baking stay-at-home moms and vice versa.
If his message in 2016 was that the political establishment and cultural elitists were exploiting, ignoring and sneering at regular Americans, his message this time is that the opposition despises and is aggressively plotting to destroy MAGA country.
But rather than the elite of Davos sneering at his populism and hoping it will be business as usual, surely this time around the root causes of the status quo being rejected by angry electorates need to be addressed?
Jefferies may seem like he's sneering at you or wondering at your dimness, but he never seems to be talking down to you," Mike Hale wrote in his review for The New York Times of "The Jim Jeffries Show.
It's known for producing cutting videos like this one, in which a former soldier and amputee criticizes the president's policies as bad for America, and for veterans: In the video, the vet pumps iron while sneering at the president.
Photo: APLike bankers on a balcony, sipping champagne and sneering at a growing crowd of protesters angrily chanting from the gutters below, Verizon has taken to openly giving the finger to the throngs of Americans online desperate to defend net neutrality.
Now that I am a woman who can maturely support other women instead of sneering at their lack of bratty bona fides, relationships like Kat's with Bianca and with, well, most people in general is something that I appreciate, not judge.
From fawning over his bodacious bod and frosted tips to speculating wildly over his father's history with drugs, and from sneering at the level of his competition to begrudging his unusually high starting salary—it seems everyone has an opinion on Northcutt.
And yet that's when he lays into Ray, sneering at this fresh-out-of-prison doofus he doesn't want to admit is his funhouse reflection, and proclaiming his superiority to the "fuckup," despite the two men being in the same dire situation.
Ms. Caruana Galizia, whose family spoke English at home rather than Maltese, played into and helped fan this culture, sneering at rule-bending compatriots as "Sicilians" and drawing the hostility of those who viewed her as the haughty representative of an Anglicized elite.
After all, Far From Home mines multiple gags out of Peter's rival Flash (Tony Revolori) idolizing Spider-Man while sneering at Peter, and it's always seemed like that dynamic was a setup for a big comic payoff when Flash finds out they're the same person.
It's all very well sneering at actors doing activism in their tuxedos — particularly if they're Tom Hiddleston — but this year there's a reality TV star in the White House, so if Denzel Washington has something to say about it, then he should go right ahead.
Mr. Gray, the consultant, says Washingtonians still don't fathom the extreme level of heartland anger against how government "shoves things down their throats" by interfering with how they raise their kids, sneering at their faith, denigrating America's heritage and regulating them half to death.
They are spaces in which a minority still subjected to frequent violence and hate crimes, and the pernicious drip-drip of sneering at difference can get away from all of that and drink and dance and desire one another, openly and freely, without being afraid.
The American public seemed remarkably comfortable sneering at a 163-year-old who married someone old enough to know better, and Stodden grew up in a kind of media wasteland where the easy and seemingly reasonable thing to do was to call her a dumb slut.
Montreal Journal MONTREAL — On one side of a grand square near the old Port of Montreal is a sculpture of a Frenchwoman in a Chanel suit, clasping a poodle and sneering at the Bank of Montreal, a former symbol of British colonial rule built in 1847.
" When Mr. Ashbery praised the poems of Mr. O'Hara in 1967 for having "no program," and in particular for avoiding commentary on the Vietnam War, the poet Louis Simpson angrily responded that it was "not amusing to see a poet sneering at the conscience of others.
Cumming Sr. makes a brief appearance at the start of this book, too, sneering at the little plastic Kodak camera that his son wins in a church raffle: "Get on with that grass" — an instruction to which the rest of the book might be said to raise a puckish middle finger.
With the Belarus authorities infuriated by frequent sneering at their country in the Russian news media, a court in Minsk last year convicted three contributors to Regnum, a nominally private Russian news service with ties to the security apparatus, on charges of inciting ethnic discord by mocking Belarus and its language.
While she tells Rachel that in her family, "we understand how to build things that last," sneering at the idea that people should prioritize their own happiness over their family's success, her background lays out a compelling character story that gives her strong emotional reasons for wanting to see Asian women stay in traditional gender roles.
Verizon Says Exec&aposs Joke About Installing a &aposVerizon Puppet&apos at FCC to Kill Net Neutrality Was…Like bankers on a balcony, sipping champagne and sneering at a growing crowd of protesters angrily…Read more ReadOne of the more egregious of Pai's jokes, which reflects the frequent accusations that he's a corporate shill, comes at the 20:00 mark.
No longer can Javad Zarif, the foreign minister, enjoy a rueful understanding among his international peers when sneering at the White House's "B-Team" -- a term he coined to highlight the links between Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, national security advisor John Bolton, the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates, when it comes to policy on Iran.
But the choice of his most recent target, Fed Chair Janet Yellen, has a different sort of consequence than sneering at Marco RubioMarco Antonio RubioTrump moves forward with F-16 sale to Taiwan opposed by China The Hill's Morning Report — Trump and the new Israel-'squad' controversy Trump crosses new line with Omar, Tlaib, Israel move MORE or questioning John McCainJohn Sidney McCainFighter pilot vs.
Verizon Says Exec&aposs Joke About Installing a &aposVerizon Puppet&apos at FCC to Kill Net Neutrality Was…Like bankers on a balcony, sipping champagne and sneering at a growing crowd of protesters angrily…Read more ReadAt a joint press conference on Monday, where Rosenworcel also spoke, Schneiderman said the identities of as many as 50,000 New Yorkers may have been used without their permission in an effort to influence the outcome of Chairman Pai's proposal to rollback net neutrality rules.
If clubbing is, as we're often told, a truly inclusive experience—or at least one that purports to a kind of inclusivity not seen in many other places—then sneering at the kind of people who actively enjoy paying hand over first to fist pump to "big room tech house" makes about as much sense as proclaiming that anyone who enjoys trance steals knickers off washing lines, or that the House Lad we outlined here on THUMP last week is an inherently evil creation because he likes Eats Everything and leg days.
It's a deuced bit better than becoming a sulking musical conservative, sneering at anything after middle-period Beethoven.
After sneering at Elmer's ability to hypnotize him, Bugs suddenly notices his watch, exclaiming, "I'm overdue at the airport", and proceeds to take off and fly like an airplane. Bugs states "I'm the B-19!" and flies away toward the airport.
His father is often sneering at him, and his first kiss is the unnamed character. Hideaki is torn about his fatherlike relationship to her as well as her young age, however Sakura takes the initiative and confesses her love for him and her intention to be his.
Sally Sue is scared, and not knowing that Piper can fly, thinks she is spying or stalking her family. Piper embarrasses herself when she keeps missing the ball during the game, and Millie Mae Miller isn't helping; she keeps sneering at Piper. Determined to prove herself, Piper then flies to catch the ball. Everyone falls silent, thinking Piper is from the devil.
Gajah Mada faced opposition, distrust and sneering at the Majapahit court because of his careless act which was not to the taste of the Majapahit nobles and undermined king Hayam Wuruk's influence. The story of the Princess Pitaloka and the battle of Bubat is the main theme of the Kidung Sunda while an historical account of Pasunda Bubat is also mentioned in Pararaton, but not in the Nagarakretagama.
The Colonel in turn agrees to destroy the incriminating evidence. To hide the real reason from him, Petrovna pretends to abandon Rostof because he cannot afford to supply her with expensive clothes and jewels, sneering at his well meaning gift of some shoes. Rostof is left heartbroken, while Petrovna is secretly anguished. At the end of the film, as his regiment rides out of St. Petersburg, Rostof symbolically ignores a rose thrown to him from her balcony by Petrovna.
White- Spunner, p.70 In 1670, a scandal broke: Captain Gerard, who had assaulted Sir John Coventry MP for sneering at the Court's mistresses, was found to have misappropriated large sums of pay for 'false musters'. The Life Guards were more Catholic and under York's influence, whereas the Protestant illegitimate Duke of Monmouth by 1674 was Commander-in-Chief of the Forces. The champion of Protestantism had more support in the country and amongst the Blues.
The Fall's music at the time was described as "Mancabilly", and by Smith himself as "Country 'n' Northern".Spicer, Al (1999) Rock: 100 Essential CDs, Rough Guides, , pp. 65-6 The album opens with "Pay Your Rates", the lyric described as one that "excoriates small-minded conformity". Second track "English Scheme" was seen as Smith "sneering at the middle class liberals".Brackett, Nathan & Hoard, Christian (eds.) (2004) The New Rolling Stone Album Guide, Simon & Schuster Ltd.
'' ; :Voice Actor: Ryouichi Tanaka :When Leo Aiolia went to Japan to deal with the rebelling Bronze Saints, he was sent under the watch of three Silver Saints. Dio was one of them, and spent most of the time sneering at the other Saints. When Aiolia decided to spare Pegasus Seiya's life for the moment, Dio and the others remarked that the Gold Saint was too soft, and decided to deal with Seiya themselves. After throwing Seiya around with their respective attacks, the young Bronze Saint received unexpected help from the Sagittarius Gold Cloth, enwrapping his body to protect him.
Nebuchadnezzar asked Zedekiah to swear that he would not disclose this, and Zedekiah swore. Subsequently, the five kings over whom Nebuchadnezzar had appointed Zedekiah were sitting and sneering at Nebuchadnezzar in Zedekiah’s presence, and they told Zedekiah that the kingship did not belong to Nebuchadnezzar but to Zedekiah, as Zedekiah descended from David. So Zedekiah too sneered at Nebuchadnezzar and disclosed that once he saw him tear the flesh of a live hare and eat it. The five kings immediately told Nebuchadnezzar, who forthwith came to Antioch, where the members of the Great Sanhedrin went to meet him.
Butler continued as Under-Secretary for India for the rest of Baldwin's government (1935–7). He had a distant relationship with Lord Zetland, who required him to book an appointment in advance if he wanted to see him. In his memoirs Butler makes no mention of the 1935-7 period except a single paragraph sneering at Zetland, despite the crises in foreign policy (Italian expansion into Abyssinia in late 1935, German remilitarisation of the Rhineland in March 1936 and the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in June 1936) which took place in this period.Jago 2015, p83 Neville Chamberlain succeeded Baldwin as Prime Minister in May 1937.
The press found the play overlong, and accused Shaw of mediocrity, sneering at heroism and patriotism, heartless cleverness, and copying W.S.Gilbert's style. The public took a different view, and the management of the theatre staged extra matinée performances to meet the demand. The play ran from April to July, toured the provinces and was staged in New York. It earned him £341 in royalties in its first year, a sufficient sum to enable him to give up his salaried post as a music critic. Among the cast of the London production was Florence Farr, with whom Shaw had a romantic relationship between 1890 and 1894, much resented by Jenny Patterson.
Despite their new financial wealth, troubles continue to grow for the Marble family. When Annie sees a small advertisement in the newspaper asking for anyone who knows the whereabouts of Medland to contact a firm of solicitors, glances at the bottle of cyanide (originally bought by Marble for developing photographs), and one of his recently-acquired books about poison and its effects, she realises what her husband has done, but stands by him. Winnie becomes a bit of a snob, consorting with a higher social class of people and sneering at her parents. When she runs away one night, Annie chases after her in the rain and becomes very ill.
A fight takes place at the end of the train, and the guard is shot by Blackwell, collapsing against the door and half falling out of the train. They force the guard at gunpoint, as he clings to the door, to tell them where he took the jewels, and he subsequently does (while sneering at Fitzgerald's foolishness), giving them a phone number to call for his contact in Bridgend, near where Anthony's boss lives. Once he has given this information up, Blackwell kicks him fully out of the speeding train. The two men subsequently travel to Bridgend, and phone the number from a local phonebox, and, impersonating the guard, tell the man on the other end of the line that there is a problem.
On his website Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings, Dave Sindelar panned the film, criticizing the acting and stating that director Lewis "manages to make his movies look like home movies without giving them that air of verisimilitude that would make them believable". Dennis Schwartz of Ozus' World Movie Reviews gave Blood Feast a C grade, stating that it was "one of those really bad films that some take pleasure laughing at and others sneering at and others doing both". Allmovie's Fred Beldin wrote, "The plot is threadbare, the acting is on a par with the clumsiest of high school plays and the direction is static and uninvolving. Nevertheless, this is one of the important releases in film history, ushering in a new acceptance of explicit violence that was obviously just waiting to be exploited".
The presence of such well-known Anarchists as Mrs. Lucy Parsons, > wife of one of the victims of the outrageous Haymarket trial, Emma Goldman, > common-law wife of Berkman, who shot Manager Frick at the time of the > Homestead strike, and others, all enlisted under the colonization wing, the > members of which were now using the phrases of the Anarchists at sneering at > political action, showed that a parting of the ways must come. It rapidly > developed that the colonization forces had organized to get control of the > convention and had even gone to the length of organizing local 'branches on > paper' within three days before the convention, in order to increase its > list of delegates and make its control a certainty. These branches had been > organized by William Burns and the other members of the national board, with > the exception of Messrs.
Kierkegaard's relationship to feminism is a troublesome one, Kierkegaard has been described as misogynistic, making "snide comments about woman’s nature, mocking with utmost irony her “great abilities” and sneering at the possibility of her emancipation" although Dera Sipe of Villanova University states that viewing Kierkegaard as a "straight misogynist is highly problematic". In her paper Kierkegaard and Feminism: A Paradoxical Friendship, Sipe commends Kierkegaard for taking "a hammer to the cold foundations of traditional Western philosophy" and introducing existentialism which feminism has adopted and thrived in. She then states that due to Kierkegaard's rampant use of Pseudonyms one must separate Kierkegaard from his Pseudonyms. Sipe argues that it "would be of more benefit to feminism not to read Kierkegaard in search of his own personal stance on the woman question, but rather to read him in an exploratory manner as one who has exposed new avenues of thought, new ways of examining the woman question".
Jamie (Reynolds) is the getaway driver for a gang of robbers, but when the robbery goes wrong he drives off and makes his way by car and then train to a rural village, Welford, in Devon, where his estranged uncle, Kit (Holt), lives alone. Although Kit is not particularly pleased to see Jamie, he allows him to stay for a couple of days. A couple of days' stopover turns into an indefinite period, as Jamie, all the while sneering at Kit's rural life, gets a job (or is it a partnership?) at the local garage and eats Kit out of house and home. Things get momentarily worse for Kit as Jamie's estranged wife Linda (Sellars) turns up, hoping for reconciliation, but although Kit is wary of another unwanted guest at first, Linda is far more amenable than Jamie, whose attention has been diverted away by Betty (Morris), a single woman in the village whom he starts an affair with.
He considers it to be "Musically uninspired by The Beatles' standards" and ruined by the engineering error in the third verse. Alex Petridis of The Guardian finds the song inferior to "We Can Work It Out", writing: "Its addictive riff aside, there is something unappealingly snooty about Day Tripper: the sound of an acid initiate sneering at someone insufficiently hip to have turned on, tuned in and dropped out." "Day Tripper" / "We Can Work It Out" was one of the "Treasure Island" singles listed in Greil Marcus's 1979 book Stranded. It was also included in Marsh's 1989 book The 1001 Greatest Singles Ever Made, ranked at number 382, and in Paul Williams' 1993 book Rock and Roll: The 100 Best Singles of All Time. The NME ranked it at number 25 in the magazine's list of "The Top 100 Singles of All Time" in 1976, and Mojo ranked it 62nd in a similar list compiled in 1997.
This novel explores theme of homosexuality, and some of its characters express strongly pacifist views. The journalist James Douglas, who had previously incited prosecution for indecency of The Rainbow by D. H. Lawrence,David Bradshaw, 'The Great Crusader: When the Sunday Express led the campaign for literary hygiene', Times Literary Supplement ((August 19 and 26, 2011), 16 wrote in the magazine London Opinion: > A thoroughly poisonous book, every copy of which ought to be put on the fire > forthwith, is Despised and Rejected, by A. T. Fitzroy – probably a pen-name. > Of its hideous immoralities the less said the better; but concerning its > sympathetic presentation, in the mouths of its ‛hero' and of other > characters of pacifism and conscientious objection, and of sneering at the > English as compared with the Hun, this needs to be asked: What is the use of > our spending hundreds of thousands of pounds on propaganda, and tens of > thousands more on Censorship, while pestiferous filth like this remains > unsuppressed? The book is published by C. W. Daniel, Ltd.
We believed before > the Exhibition opened that we had the best locks in the world, and among us > Bramah and Chubb were reckoned quite as impregnable as Gibraltar— more so, > indeed, for the key to the Mediterranean was taken by us, but none among us > could penetrate into the locks and shoot the bolts of these masters. The > mechanical spirit, however, is never at rest, and if it is lulled into a > false state of listlessness in one branch of industry, and in one part of > the world, elsewhere it springs up suddenly to admonish and reproach us with > our supineness. Our descendents on the other side of the water are every now > and then administering to the mother country a wholesome filial lesson upon > this very text, and recently they have been "rubbing us up" with a severity > which perhaps we merited for sneering at their shortcomings in the > Exhibition. In 1854 he was awarded a Telford Medal by the Institution of Civil Engineers for his paper 'On the Principles and Construction of Locks'.

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