denouncement 的定义
de·nounced, de·nounc·ing.
- to condemn or censure openly or publicly: to denounce a politician as morally corrupt.
- to make a formal accusation against, as to the police or in a court.
- to give formal notice of the termination or denial of.
- Archaic. to announce or proclaim, especially as something evil or calamitous.
- Obsolete. to portend.
denouncement 近义词
accusation
denouncement 的近义词 6 个
更多denouncement例句
- Amazon acknowledged the report and denounced forced labor in a statement on its website.
- All of those moves probably helped her in this left-leaning state, even if she annoyed Maine Democratic activists by voting for Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation in 2018 and giving a speech ahead of that vote in which she bluntly denounced her critics.
- Then, as later, opponents denounced him as a socialist and a communist.
- Sharon McGowan, legal director for Lambda Legal, criticized Barrett for refusing to denounce ADF during the confirmation hearing.
- Also needed is a way for whistleblowers to denounce unethical experiments, the panel said.
- After my first week on campus, I began to meet upperclassmen who were unapologetic in their denouncement of the University.
- No major figure from either party has mustered such seemingly obvious denouncement.
- Kyle Smith's denouncement of Free to Be in Sunday's New York Post because it “emasculated men” is totally baffling.
- She did not allow her maidenly reserve to stand in the way of her frank denouncement of the injustice of human and social laws.
- It was a passionate denouncement, calculated to stir the blood.
- The Baronet not long after this denouncement retired to Boston.
- But a subject class or race does but little for their amelioration when content with its denouncement.
- But she need not have feared such an immediate denouncement.