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Shockingly brutal or cruel.
monstrous
grievous
atrocious
heinous
evil
Extremely wicked.
villainous
nefarious
iniquitous
villainous
nefarious
iniquitous
1
I find myself short of ready money and threatened by
villainous
creditors.
2
See what a
villainous
expedition he has succeeded in involving us in.
3
Nowhere in the world is there a more
villainous
band of cutthroats.
4
Stern is seriously being considered for the role of the
villainous
Scarecrow.
5
A
villainous
boy, named Robinson, was the chief actor in the tragedy.
1
Facebook also said it was continuing its investigation into possible
nefarious
activity.
2
Much of the
nefarious
software's behaviour is still not really understood, however.
3
The New York Police Department's
nefarious
and racist practices are no secret.
4
The potential for
nefarious
activity is literally unlimited with root account access.
5
The Vaterland has been engaged in her
nefarious
trade altogether too long.
1
All my previous ideas and prejudices appeared to me monstrous and
iniquitous
.
2
A few words will place this
iniquitous
combination in its proper light.
3
This oppressive and
iniquitous
league was but too successful against the republic.
4
Such unnatural and
iniquitous
practices can be restrained only by severe punishments.
5
She hadn't intended to sin; but she must have been unusually
iniquitous
.
1
This deportment was too humiliating and
flagitious
to be imputed to him.
2
That gallant Cavalier was hanged, after the Restoration, for a
flagitious
burglary.
3
Since a legal marriage was impossible, no doubt, his views were
flagitious
.
4
I place on that miscreant's back a long array of
flagitious
ancestors.
5
Thus, in a moment, had terminated his long and
flagitious
career.
6
For the ambiguous advantages which overgrown wealth and
flagitious
tyranny have to bestow?
7
Your youth and inexperience make you a stranger to a deceitful and
flagitious
world.
8
To them, such a
flagitious
betrayal of trust was a new and startling event.
9
To do so would be the most
flagitious
injustice.
10
What one party calls meritorious, the other denominates
flagitious
.
11
Egmont denounced the proceedings as highly
flagitious
,
and busied himself with punishing the criminals in Flanders.
12
To abandon their shield is a
flagitious
crime.
13
Quickly, and with as much self-command as I could muster, I related the
flagitious
history to him.
14
His conspiracy has been one of the most
flagitious
of which history will ever furnish an example.
15
The Puritan had frowned at innocent diversions; the comic poet took under his patronage the most
flagitious
excesses.
16
His motives were sordid and
flagitious
.
flagitious
most flagitious
flagitious manner
flagitious ancestors
flagitious appeal
flagitious betrayal