Strike with disgust or revulsion.
1 The Cluniac was a man of the world whom no confidences could scandalise .
2 Didn't he wink saucily at promenading matrons just to scandalise them?
3 The comedy routines that scandalise some people will have others rolling in the aisles.
4 But nothing must transpire which could stumble or scandalise the other members of the Community.
5 You will scandalise society-youwill separate from me-
6 A scandal, in this sense, must always arise in your own party; you cannot scandalise the enemy.
7 Do you want to scandalise every soul?
8 Papa is not going to scandalise his nursery with old-world gossip, nor bring a blush over our chaste bread-and-butter.
9 Having given birth to two sons, she had fulfilled her parents' expectations, only to scandalise them when she left her husband.
10 I am moved to say things I have never said before, and it is possible I may astonish and perchance scandalise Paris.
11 When I have retired from the chair (which I must not scandalise ) I shall write a lay sermon on the text.
12 We ought not to expose ourselves to a mistaken judgment; and we have no right to do anything that will scandalise the community.
13 I can't separate from him because that would scandalise the name of God, she allegedly said in a message to one of her children.
14 It was remarked that Darnley did not appear at this ceremony, and that his absence seemed to scandalise greatly the queen of England's envoy.
15 The idea of one of the august body lowering himself to the extent of emphasising his authority with the bare knuckle would scandalise the powers.
16 The author may have been intending to scandalise , but the list of serious works to his name at least requires that charge to be proven.
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Об этом термине scandalise
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Translations for scandalise