revile 的 2 个定义
re·viled, re·vil·ing.
- to assail with contemptuous or opprobrious language; address or speak of abusively.
re·viled, re·vil·ing.
- to speak abusively.
revile 近义词
scold
更多revile例句
- The Paralympics are supposed to celebrate people with disabilities, not revile them.
- In the span of a few years, Crocs have gone from reviled to subversively cool to mainstream.
- Specifically, how some ethnic groups that enjoy broad acceptance today were once reviled, such as, for example, the Irish.
- While Tibetan spiritual leader Dalai Lama has long been reviled by Beijing as a dangerous “splittist,” his image was still displayed discreetly.
- The company is widely reviled by all except those who cash its checks.
- But his economy is in peril and the people who support him today may well revile him tomorrow.
- And one day, perhaps, the conservatives who today revile John Roberts will give him his due.
- While Democrats tend to revile their losing candidates, Republicans revere theirs.
- He would set impositions of unprecedented length, and revile himself for ruining the victim's handwriting.
- They praise that which they know, they revile that which they know not.
- The public were p. 158appealed to on the subject; pamphlets were written and newspapers were hired to revile the railway.
- We had a bugle player who played revile when the German Camp Commander and his group came in every morning.
- As soon as they arrived Inside the wire he would start playing a swinging revile.