Cause to be bitter or resentful.
1 The meat of the one man shall envenom the meat of the other.
2 I rushed forward, regretting only that I had not had time to envenom my blade.
3 The real difficulty being social and racial, to mix politics with it was to envenom it.
4 These notaries are strange fellows; they envenom everything.
5 That kindred subsisted between them was possible, notwithstanding this dissimilitude; but this circumstance contributed to envenom my suspicions.
6 Algerian politics, also, envenom these squabbles.
7 To all the passions which usually envenom contests among countrymen, avarice was added, and rendered their enmity more rancorous.
8 I feel moved to say bitter things-toshoot darts in defiance at every glance - to envenom every sentence which I speak.
9 The crises of 1912 moreover were not so acute as bitterly to envenom the struggle in the way that happened during the two following years.
10 There were private wrongs to envenom the contest, but it was the mercantile quarrel on which the Colonel chose to set his declaration of war.
11 The importance they attached to it was irritating-itrather envenomed my dissent.
12 The address gave rise to much animated discussion, envenomed by party spirit.
13 In the whole quiver of malice, is there so envenomed a shaft?
14 The bitterness of the discussion envenomed several wounds already deep enough.
15 There is something in this cursed French constitution which envenoms everything.
16 The grievance soon became envenomed by complaints and ulterior measures.
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About this term envenom
Verb
Indicative · Present