释义 |
Definition of damnatory in English: damnatoryadjective ˈdamnəˌt(ə)riˈdæmnəˌtɔri Conveying or causing censure or damnation. 责难的,诅咒的 the case against you was most damnatory Example sentencesExamples - By the time I had spotted this damnatory news item, it was mid morning here and I was at work.
- Anything that falls outside the purview of our classification is considered either miraculous or damnatory.
- Armed with the copies of the damnatory letters, Gabrielle demanded money first and then marriage.
- The same damnatory clause is also wedged in at the close of the first and at the beginning of the second part.
- Specifically, Robert cannot accept Christ's divinity, the biblical miracles, or the ‘damnatory psalms'.
Synonyms disapproving, censorious, censuring, critical, scathing, damning, condemnatory, condemning, denunciatory
OriginLate 17th century: from Latin damnatorius, from dam(p)nat- 'caused to suffer loss', from the verb dam(p)nare (see damn). Definition of damnatory in US English: damnatoryadjectiveˈdamnəˌtôrēˈdæmnəˌtɔri Conveying or causing censure or damnation. 责难的,诅咒的 the case against you was most damnatory Example sentencesExamples - Specifically, Robert cannot accept Christ's divinity, the biblical miracles, or the ‘damnatory psalms'.
- The same damnatory clause is also wedged in at the close of the first and at the beginning of the second part.
- Anything that falls outside the purview of our classification is considered either miraculous or damnatory.
- Armed with the copies of the damnatory letters, Gabrielle demanded money first and then marriage.
- By the time I had spotted this damnatory news item, it was mid morning here and I was at work.
Synonyms disapproving, censorious, censuring, critical, scathing, damning, condemnatory, condemning, denunciatory
OriginLate 17th century: from Latin damnatorius, from dam(p)nat- ‘caused to suffer loss’, from the verb dam(p)nare (see damn). |