There'd been nothing derogatory or recent under either personal or business files.
2
Asked if that was not derogatory language, he said it was not.
3
There is nothing derogatory to her in what you say-quite the reverse.
4
No truth can be derogatory to the presumed fountain of all truth.
5
The flock, with shrill, derogatory remarks, flew in an airline straight away.
1
Need is now seen as a pejorative that diminishes one's individual sovereignty.
2
It is a pejorative charge easily levelled but difficult to withdraw.
3
It's not just for the politicians that the term working-class has become pejorative.
4
Wales's style became known as Warrenball, a pejorative term they felt was simplistic.
5
That's a little pejorative, if I may say so, Ms. Y'breq.
1
Plodding, impotent and characterless: these type of pejoratives were supposedly banished in Ryan Giggs's brave new Manchester United world.
2
Using stigmatizing pejoratives as a perverse badge of honor is a time-honored tactic for subcultures: punks, gangs, delinquents, mafias, pirates, bandits, racketeers.
1
DiSanto: I understand that it is considered a derogatoryterm by certain people.
2
Fag What it means to South Africans: A derogatoryterm.
3
Bengali is a derogatoryterm for the Rohingya implying they are interlopers from Bangladesh.
4
Lai Dai Han is a derogatoryterm used to describe Vietnamese children with South Korean fathers.
5
They showed a swastika next to a noose and contained a derogatoryterm aimed at African-Americans.
1
Wales's style became known as Warrenball, a pejorativeterm they felt was simplistic.
2
This discredited and pejorativeterm has now been in abeyance for over a decade.
3
Of course it was, and don't you feel that 'betrayal' is rather a pejorativeterm?
4
This is why "trial by media" is a pejorativeterm.
5
Study is a pejorativeterm.
Uso de term of abuse en inglés
1
Why, then, has it become a termofabuse in Ireland?
2
Christine, Atkinson said, contriving to make the name sound like a termofabuse.
3
After all, it was bicyclists who made "pedestrian" a termofabuse.
4
To him 'metaphysics' is a synonym for 'loose thinking,' and hence a termofabuse.
5
As a termofabuse, it is extremely old.
6
Coming up with the alt-right's favourite termofabuse might have gone to his head.
7
The word anecdotal now seems to be regarded as a termofabuse in research circles.
8
I refuse to allow the Nazis to tell me that that is a termofabuse.
9
Hitherto 'atheist' had been a termofabuse, a particularly nasty slur to hurl at your enemies.
10
Yes, despite my high esteem for him, I will apply to him the Johnsonian termofabuse.
11
I thought "amateur" was a termofabuse for anyone not very good at their job.
12
It's almost a termofabuse.
13
Once a termofabuse to denigrate a whole generation and then extended by gloating, trium(...)
14
They were made by travelling people in an era before "tinker" became a termofabuse.
15
Much may be forgiven, however, to the introducer of so charming a termofabuse as "profluvious."
16
AS A card-carrying member of the middle class, I'm occasionally stung when it is used as a termofabuse.