Word or grammatical form expressing a low opinion of someone or something.
Having a negative denotation or connotation.
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.
6 Ultra running is running, sort of, and that's not being pejorative .
7 Mercenaries is a pejorative and distinctly cruel word for a reason.
8 Regardless of the pejorative stereotypes that may persist with Allardyce, his principles speak differently.
9 Authoritarianism is not a pathology; nor is the term pejorative , for it is descriptive.
10 This discredited and pejorative term has now been in abeyance for over a decade.
11 But it would disagree that this is selfish in the pejorative sense of sociobiology.
12 Of course it was, and don't you feel that 'betrayal' is rather a pejorative term?
13 In several posts he made pejorative puns about the party of Prime Minister Donald Tusk.
14 One starts to see "politics"-inthe pejorative sense of the word-withinthe firm.
15 The term shadow banking may have a pejorative tone, suggesting dodgy lending and borrowing practice.
16 This pejorative and pathological use of the terms is, however, more uncommon than the preceding.
Другие примеры для термина "pejorative"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Translations for pejorative