If they voice dissent, their communities might socially ostracise them.
2
Drug-taking blocks the pain and yet we ostracise and criminalise rather than understand and support.
3
Than to ostracise Apollo as an enervating fraud.
4
Hence he did not ostracise me; but smiling, said, "Train very late to-day, sir."
5
The Kaniva Tonga website reported the other 32 nobles had signed an agreement to ostracise Lord Ma'afu.
6
She knew that the world could not afford to ostracise the men,-thoughhappily it might condemn the women.
7
If you can do no more, you can at least condemn by your vote, and ostracise by denunciation.
8
Whom had Sparta to ostracise?
9
A lot of people see the needs that exist and, instead of rendering the necessary assistance, they chastise, ostracise, and discriminate.
10
But this dash back to absolute childhood is no longer quite possible and the other children ostracise her for behaving so badly.
11
But military strategists and political analysts say any meaningful pullout would ostracise Italy from its allies abroad and anger moderates at home.
12
Sweden and Denmark decided it was better to engage with him than ostracise him and Britain's ambassador met Modi in Gujarat last year.
13
You must avoid an emotional reaction that leaves you in an even worse state -and you must ostracise those who resort to violence.
14
After it became known that J was living as a woman, the community threatened to ostracise the family if they had any contact with her.
15
In Paradise, a convent-turned-women's refuge is stormed by townsmen, a midnight-skinned aristocracy who ostracise "yellow" outsiders and restrain women to keep the bloodline pure.
16
But now he has acknowledged that Israel is "facing a world that is liable to ostracise us because of the deadlock in the peace process".