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invective
/ ɪnˈvɛktɪv /
noun
vehement accusation or denunciation, esp of a bitterly abusive or sarcastic kind
adjective
characterized by or using abusive language, bitter sarcasm, etc
Other Word Forms
- invectively adverb
- invectiveness noun
- uninvective adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of invective1
Word History and Origins
Origin of invective1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The book’s finest pieces wrangle, in elegant prose, with humanity’s contradictions; the weaker ones indulge in name-dropping, footnotes and op-ed invective.
The directive from the club is that Rodgers resigned, but reading Desmond's invective, line by line, you have to wonder why did he allow it to get this far down the line?
Perched in his art-filled château in the south of France, the British expatriate spent years hurling invectives at, falling out with or blatantly undermining an astonishing number of people.
But it’s fair to say that Reagan never indulged in outright name-calling or hateful invective, stressed his desire for negotiation over confrontation and left the nuclear saber-rattling to subordinates.
He is, however, at least slightly better dressed than a peasant screaming invectives in a whiny British accent.
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