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"sneeringly" Definitions
  1. in a way that shows that you have no respect for somebody by the expression on your face or by the way that you speak

41 Sentences With "sneeringly"

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

I don't mean that sneeringly — I actually don't know.
"Bearded ladies," members of the classical-music establishment sneeringly called them.
What was striking was his tone: pessimistic, angry, sneeringly and unsmilingly fascistic.
"Do you know how much I pay in taxes?" he asked sneeringly.
The first 19 words in the video are spoken, sneeringly, by Donald Trump.
"" against his enemies, with Soros, who he sneeringly called "Uncle George," and CEU prominent among them.
While British tabloid press sneeringly dubbed it a "bionic penis," Le likens it to breast implants following a mastectomy.
"Darkness rises, and the light to meet it," says Snoke, sneeringly but correctly; he doesn't know the half of it.
If anything, we should be a little afraid of their power — even when they're not sneeringly referring to us as insect.
" She is greeted by nearly all the residents with skepticism at first; one asks her sneeringly, "You some kind of whisperer?
The combination of the obscenity and the sneeringly rebellious vibe of the lyrics hurt Mr. McDonald career-wise, but of that song, he has no regrets.
With titles like The Botched Facelift and Peeping Tommy Goes Cougar Hunting, Gackley sneeringly suggests the childish nature of things considered exclusive to the realm of adulthood.
The white bigots portrayed here came across as so sneeringly ignorant and dastardly that there was no chance that anyone watching the show might identify with them.
Japanese-American businessmen, farmers, fishermen, educators and doctors, even Japanese-Americans who fought for the United States in World War I, were sneeringly lumped together under a denigrating shorthand: Japs.
" It was said sneeringly, but Lévy embraces it: The United States "is an empire, if you will, but a recalcitrant one, whose nobility has always been to balk at imperialism.
In his many rallies, Mr. Trump has been sneeringly referring to Mr. Obama as "Barack H. Obama" — H is for Hussein, with all that the word implies when the president uses it.
This tendency by Trump, more than anything, is what drove Bannon nuts — and will drive Breitbart's assault on the "globalists," as Bannonites sneeringly call the officials responsible for the more conventional policy actions.
Some remarks, especially Geftman-Gold's sneeringly callous comment – for which she has since apologized – could cause further misery in those seeking to cope with the trauma of injury or loss of someone close to them.
She has always aroused a quasi-aesthetic repulsion within the metropolitan class; and, indeed, it is that continued detestation of what Jonathan Miller in the 1980s sneeringly called "her odious suburban gentility" that most potently keeps her memory alive.
The video package they cut, in which Ellsworth delivers a heartfelt monologue about hard work and enthusiasm in front of a wall of action figures, only for Riddle to sneeringly dismiss him as a chinless nobody, is a perfect blend of old and new sensibilities.
In 2015, Prince Charles anointed Mantel with the title of Dame Commander, Order of the British Empire, the equivalent of knighthood, prompting some in the press to sneeringly draw comparisons between the modern-day royals and the louche, back-stabbing behavior of the Tudors.
Guitarist magazine said the track reminded them of how the band were once, "sneeringly superior", peers to U2.
Carl belittles Mal for being weak. Turning to Jim, Carl accuses him of sleeping with Ankhila. He begins taunting him, claiming he is as imperfect as his colleagues, and sneeringly suggesting Jim might get AIDS. Jim grapples Carl onto the ground in a headlock.
John Cole: A 12-year-old boy who becomes friends with Nicholas at the Manor. The Spiders: Iggy, Breaker, and Moray, the orphanage bullies. Mrs. Brindle: The woman in charge of the cleaning at the orphanage. Ms. Candace: The slightly senile nurse, also sneeringly called "Miss Pretty Pills" by Mrs. Brindle.
U.S. Steel made enormous wartime profits. Between 1915 and 1919, those profits equaled the wages received by the 2 million U.S. soldiers in France combined. Baruch threatened to take over U.S. Steel unless the company agreed to lower its prices. Gary sneeringly said that the government wasn’t capable of running the company.
Mr Smith tells her that she is very ill and there is no treatment. Sarah Jane, believing herself no longer capable of doing her work, offers her life and lifestyle to Ruby. Ruby accepts the offer; Sarah Jane removes her voice commands from Mr Smith's system. Ruby now reveals her true nature, sneeringly calling Rani "wonderful and brilliant", and Clyde "plucky", and openly mocking Sarah Jane.
He sneeringly tells Becky that she needs to stop living in a fantasy world and grow up. Mel: Luke's secretary introduced in the first novel. She and Becky presumably became friends in the 2nd novel. It's unknown what happened to Mel, but it's presumed Alicia had her fired when she found out that Mel suspected her of lying with intent to tell Luke the truth.
Fadrique was by now so exasperated that he wrote to his father, asking if he might break off the siege. The Duke of Alba sneeringly replied that he would send his own wife if Fadrique was not up to the job. The turning point was reached in early April 1573 when Spanish-led ships from Amsterdam routed the Sea Beggars on the Haarlem Lake. This was the end of the clandestine supply routes.
Furious, Eli accuses Harry of betraying the family, speaking sneeringly of Amy and provoking him to a violent anger. Meanwhile, a nervous Amy is teased first by Celia (Michelle Johnson), Eli’s half-sister, then by Butcherbird. Harry rescues her and takes her home where, despite his obvious attraction to her, he rejects her advances and leaves. Later that night, Harry receives an unexpected visit from Celia, who seduces him, inviting him to bite her throat as they couple.
In November 1756 the Master returns to Durrisdeer, under the alias of "Mr Bally". He meets Henry on the road to the house, sneeringly comparing the two of them to Jacob and Esau, and ominously says that Henry has chosen his fate by not agreeing to the Master's plan to go to India. On his return he ingratiates himself with his father and with his brother's wife (who was once his own fiancée). Neither have seen him in eleven years and both are overjoyed at his return.
Upon publication of Look Homeward, Angel, most reviewers responded favorably, including John Chamberlain, Carl Van Doren, and Stringfellow Barr. Margaret Wallace wrote sneeringly in The New York Times Book Review that Wolfe had produced "as interesting and powerful a book as has ever been made out of the drab circumstances of provincial American life". An anonymous review published in Scribner's magazine compared Wolfe to Walt Whitman, and many other reviewers and scholars have found similarities in their works since. When published in the UK in July 1930, the book received similar reviews.
Rebecca sneeringly informs Frank that she deliberately used her irresistible sexual prowess to control him, that she had done the same with both Marsh and Paley, and that this is how she is able to have men do anything she wants. Rebecca taunts Paley by telling him to lie low, as he could be convicted of perjury, and tells him to leave because she has already forgotten him. An enraged Paley lashes out at Rebecca physically and, after Dulaney pulls him off, Paley shoots her twice. She plunges from a window to her death and Paley is arrested for murdering her.
Luigi Cherubini, 1850 Beethoven met the composer Luigi Cherubini on the latter's journey to Vienna in 1805. Cherubini, a longtime resident of Paris, was invited to mount a production of his opera Die Tage der Gefahr (or Der Wasserträger) after the success of his 1791 opera Lodoïska, which was staged by Emanuel Schikaneder on 23 March 1803 at the Theater an der Wien. Cherubini's time in Vienna was generally unhappy, but he did have the opportunity to meet Beethoven. Cherubini was in attendance for the first performances of Beethoven's opera Fidelio, to which he reacted sneeringly.
Daniel De Leon in 1902 The year 1890 has long been regarded as a watershed by the SLP as it marked the date when the organization came under the influence of Daniel De Leon.During the Arnold Petersen administration, the SLP passionately disavowed its history of the period before the arrival of De Leon, going so far as to publish a glossy illustrated "Golden Jubilee" volume celebrating the party's 50th anniversary in 1940. The pre-1890 SLP was sneeringly referred to as the "Socialistic Labor Party" (emphasis his) by Petersen in his party history contained in that volume. See: Socialist Labor Party: Golden Jubilee, 1890–1940 (cover title).
Stapleton was excoriated as either corrupt or incompetent, or both, for having the taxpayers subsidize a mere plaything of the wealthy; what the Denver Post sneeringly dubbed "Stapleton's Folly", and others jokingly called "Rattlesnake Hollow". It was viewed by some as too far from civilization to be practicable. The close relationship Stapleton seemed to have with land-owning political backers who stood to benefit, conspicuous among them H. Brown Canon of Windsor Farm Dairy, were a factor in his loss in the 1931 mayoral election to George D. Begole. The airport was later renamed Stapleton International Airport on August 25, 1944 in his honor.
He was also one of the founders and leaders of The Wanderers.Wachtel, 59 However, Portrait of an Unknown Woman caused a sensation when first exhibited, more as a result of the subject matter than the aesthetics of the work. A number of critics presumed that the woman was a prostitute. One critic described the painting as a portrayal of "a coquette in a carriage", while another wrote of "a provocatively beautiful woman, all in velvet and fur, throwing you a sneeringly sensuous glance from a luxurious carriage – is this not one of the effluvia of big cities that allow contemptible women dressed in outfits purchased for the price of their female chastity onto the streets".
Randolph Churchill, son of Winston, had an unusually checkered relationship with the gossip pages. Eager to be seen as one of London's glamorous 'Bright Young Things', in May 1932 he personally telephoned the Diary to provide them with advance details of his 21st birthday and its glittering society guest list.Pearson, John, The Private Lives of Winston Churchill, Simon & Schuster, 1991 But he flew into a rage with Beaverbrook when another of the press baron's papers, the Daily Express, singled him out in a story on the sons of great men, which sneeringly observed that "major fathers as a rule breed minor sons, so our little London peacocks had better tone down their fine feathers."Wilkes, 2002, p.
The paper slammed Labor's "wholly negative campaign, sneeringly denouncing Peter Debnam's small business record – breathtaking stuff from a Government led by a man whose chief professional experience before Parliament was advising shyster and fixer Graham Richardson." The Telegraph judged Debnam's campaign to have been "incompetent": "He is not a buffoon, yet he has acted one with his campaign gimmickry. He has created traps for himself through silly stunts," it wrote. > If this election campaign has proved anything, it is this: Labor has > completely lost its way on policy – and the Liberals are no good at politics > ... However, after 12 years, Labor's sustained policy failures should count > for more than five weeks' incompetent Liberal campaigning.
She said "this is not Think Quick, this is Spit Quick". Home Computer Buying Guide said the game had a weaker and less interesting theme than previous Carmen Sandiego titles. Anne Sushko of The Book Report recommended the game as "well developed and of high interest", though noted that it was not compatible with Windows NT. The Boston Herald gave the game a scathing review, writing that the game has lost the girl customer, that the questions are "random, narrow,[and] boring", and that "the Knowbots sneeringly insult you if you give an incorrect answer", concluding that whoever designed the game "should be asked to clear off his or her hard drive".
Johnson told Khánh that he should focus on "pacifying" his own country and the United States was opposed to his plans to invade North Vietnam. In a radio broadcast, the North Vietnamese leader Ho Chi Minh mocked Khánh for his "sheer stupidity", sneeringly asking "How can he talk about marching north when he cannot even control areas in the immediate vicinity of Saigon?" At the time, the U.S. had no ambassador in Saigon, as Lodge had returned home to campaign for the Republican Party's presidential nomination, and his successor, Maxwell Taylor, was yet to arrive. When Taylor arrived, the US tried to publicly distance itself from Khánh's demands to invade North Vietnam and to downplay it, as it wanted to portray the communists as the only aggressors and that they had no intentions of going on the attack in any form, but they were sympathetic to his sentiment.
Nevertheless, playgoers flocked to the little theatre in Tottenham Court Road, and the London stage was at once inundated with imitations of the new style of acting and the new kind of play. > Miss Marie Wilton, the darling of the Strand Theatre, and the life and soul > of the merry and really witty burlesques (what a contrast to the vapid > 'musical comedies' of to-day!) that then formed the staple fare at that > popular little playhouse, was anxious to spread her wings and try her > strength in comedy. With that object in view she had taken the old Prince of > Wales Theatre, hard by Tottenham Court Road, a place of amusement that had > fallen into such disrepute that it was sneeringly nicknamed "The Dust-bin" > ... So different in treatment was it from the plays with which theatre-goers > were then apparently well pleased that Miss Wilton's friends and admirers > frankly warned her that introduction was "dangerous." The supposed danger > lay in the simplicity of the play.

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