censorious in the PONS Dictionary

censorious Examples from the PONS Dictionary (editorially verified)

to be censorious about [or of], sth/sb
to be censorious about [or of], sth/sb

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
I was proud to help him fight a contemptible censorious lawsuit, and am very sad about his passing.
www.techdirt.com
That is to say, to consider the validity of someone's opinion before recoiling in censorious horror or questioning one's opponent's motives.
www.spiked-online.com
The time has surely come for us to stop tolerating this asinine censorious.
www.independent.ie
To make this point is also to break down the assumed split between a censorious religion and freedom of speech.
www.huffingtonpost.co.uk
We can see that in the increasingly censorious nature of third-level colleges, where the policy of "no-platforming" has resulted in a widespread suppression of dissent.
www.independent.ie
I have received a few whistles in my day -- albeit many years ago -- but never one as shrill and censorious as this.
www.mirror.co.uk
Cultural politics is typically censorious and focused on morally devaluing the other side.
www.spiked-online.com
Instead, they went for a thuggish, censorious legal smackdown.
www.tekrevue.com
Also, juvenile delinquency films combined the censorious tone of social problem films with exploitation film and melodrama.
en.wikipedia.org
People are censorious but the pendulum will swing back, as it always does.
www.dailymail.co.uk

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