(Of persons or their actions) able or disposed to inflict pain or suffering.
Very bad in degree or extent (e.g. of depression or damage).
Sinònims
Examples for "fell"
Examples for "fell"
1National aspirations were encouraged, within limits; 'autonomy' fell far short of self-determination.
2International rights groups said the vote fell well short of democratic standards.
3However, in his tests, he said, the cases fell at different angles.
4Easter fell in April this year but in late March last year.
5Italy's services PMI fell below 50 for the second time this year.
1The people were as truly savage as any South Sea Islanders .
2The savage has only impulse; the civilized man has impulses and ideas.
3In her place was a savage thing made of fury and violence.
4The image of God is defaced in the hearts of the savage.
5The savage tribesmen burst in the door and crowded into the room.
1The crisis forced authorities into a brutal cycle of interest rate hikes.
2Farm killings are usually particularly brutal, the victims isolated -easy targets.
3This year has been especially brutal for motorists and general consumers alike.
4I condemn this brutal act of terrorism in the strongest possible terms.
5This includes addressing the question of President Assad and his brutal regime.
1The idea, of course, is to change the vicious cycle in Hollywood.
2They were indeed preparing for war, a vicious and bloods earthbound war.
3To the account of one of the most vicious killers in Europe.
4Interests invariably fall asunder in the end; vicious natures can always agree.
5The discord experienced specifically in Gauteng has led to vicious political infighting.
1Modern Germany is far more scientific than England, and far more barbarous.
2Such things are unknown even in the heart of barbarous Central Africa.
3The germ of the barbarous system is there contained in its entirety.
4The forest laws also in those early times were terrible and barbarous.
5In short, the system of government, according to barbarous ideas was perfect.
1No government has a right to ride roughshod over their moral opposition.
2Runs roughshod over people, uses and abuses them. Carla looked to Scott.
3Nina's drive for perfection runs roughshod over her health and friendships.
4Yet the Asians have ridden roughshod over more established western brands.
5They're going to use it to run roughshod over the Agency.
1They are corrupt; they are base; they are cowardly; they are cruel.
2The cruel legal formalities were begun the first thing in the morning.
3But he could be as cruel as the grave in other ways.
4And They are cruel; cruelty is even in Their tread and expression.
5And excessive fines have been imposed; and illegal and cruel punishments inflicted.
6This terrific force is conditioned in our cruel social and economic arrangement.
7The Church has done many cruel things in the name of Christianity.
8The case was prejudged; the trial, a cruel and an empty form.
9It blew upon them in cruel menace of conquest, in piercing inclemency.
10In Britain the lions are securely chained, and the cruel giants disabled.
11The cruel fate of Magdeburg excited the alarm of the Protestant princes.
12Another was brutally cruel to animals; another was the impersonation of laziness.
13The most cruel tyrant the northern lands ever knew was Christian II.
14There be enough dead things in the cruel forest as it is.
15No; but it was cruel to make you have to do it.
16It is cruel to the animal, and decidedly dangerous to the hunter.
Cruel per variant geogràfica