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Among them moved people with yellow and red skulls: women; writers; actors.
2
The leaves are to be in yellow and the roses in red-gold.
3
The breach widens; the green and yellow turbans swarm within the walls.
4
I like both the red and the yellow tritoma; we have both.
5
Meeting that yellow-eyed gaze required effort, yet she managed without a falter.
1
His book may be recommended as scandalmongering-hardlyas an aid to virtue.
2
What astonishes me is his fertility in the arts of denunciation and scandalmongering.
3
Suppose you had been seen by any of the scandalmongering old wives of the garrison?
4
If you think a woman can't do any harm because she's only a scandalmongering dowdy ragbag, you're greatly mistaken.
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I am Aaron Burr, of New York, a name pretty widely known and much bandied about in these scandalmongering days.
Usage of sensationalistic in English
1
Another study last week got similar sensationalistic treatment from some sections of the media.
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Other equally sensationalistic British journalists reacted hypocritically to the publication.
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Even the extreme sensationalistic theory of knowledge which was current derived itself from this conception.
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There are at least three serious defects of sensationalistic empiricism as an educational philosophy of knowledge.
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It could certainly be argued that "Detachment" is ultimately more sensationalistic than it is enlightening.
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Obviously the Time cover is sensationalistic.
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Nor am I being sensationalistic.
8
In another, they send Web links that lead to malicious software, telling friends that it's a hilarious or sensationalistic video.
9
In many instances in the past, suicide has tended to be reported in a sensationalistic and oversimplified manner by the national media.
10
The premise drew criticism from some in the transgender community, who said the medical procedure should not be used as a sensationalistic plot device.
11
The conditional tense was hardly ever used, as were qualifiers such as "alleged" and "according to." Question marks were thrown in only for sensationalistic effect.
12
But it can also turn us into realists… Adrienne Rich On April 15th 2002 Time published one of its characteristically sensationalistic cover stories.