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Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of scornful The Nosotros people had returned Borja’s bribe money to him with no comment, only scornful silence, but the sting of the snub had not gone very deep. Charles Portis, Harper's Magazine, 28 Feb. 2025 This is the trapped subject, the voice crying out in the wilderness, seeking a response from the Everything but getting only the scornful bounce-back of itself. James Parker, The Atlantic, 18 Feb. 2025 With the scornful wave spreading across social media, Marvel waded in to stem the tide. Thomas G. Moukawsher, Newsweek, 5 Feb. 2025 What price female solidarity and empowerment, after all, if the weapon of actualization is an abusive system, one that invariably draws Santosh into its clubby, scornful, vigilante mindset? Robert Abele, Los Angeles Times, 10 Jan. 2025 See All Example Sentences for scornful
Recent Examples of Synonyms for scornful
Adjective
  • By contrast, there’s something almost nakedly contemptuous about the end of this season.
    Kathryn VanArendonk, Vulture, 30 May 2025
  • That’s fine by an administration that seems basically contemptuous of the very concept of due process.
    New York Daily News Editorial Board, New York Daily News, 31 May 2025
Adjective
  • Trump has even been disdainful or dismissive of the United States’ traditional allies, such as Mexico and Argentina.
    Christopher Sabatini, Foreign Affairs, 8 Nov. 2017
  • Wise minds inside the Trump administration will hopefully choose to drop a suit first introduced during by a Biden administration reflexively disdainful of big.
    John Tamny, Forbes.com, 10 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • Stuck a feather in his cap and called it macaroni is insulting because a macaroni was a pejorative term used to describe a fashionable man with feminine traits of 18th-century Britain.
    Kurt Snibbe, Oc Register, 2 July 2025
  • Conversations revealed an ongoing dialogue that was not only deeply insulting to Read, but morally offensive to women broadly.
    Gemma Allen, Forbes.com, 25 June 2025
Adjective
  • As the day goes on, Jim goes from a caricature of an arrogant male director to an oddly compelling picture of a pathetic man, moved by spite toward his ex-wife, Anita.
    Rafaela Bassili, Vulture, 10 July 2025
  • Actor Tyler Hilton played Chris Keller, a charming but arrogant musician, on four seasons of the teen soap.
    Bryan West, The Tennessean, 2 July 2025
Adjective
  • Deepfakes have been growing more sophisticated in recent years, in addition to being increasingly deployed for malicious purposes.
    Shannon Bond, NPR, 10 July 2025
  • The best way to safeguard yourself from malicious links that install malware, potentially accessing your private information, is to have antivirus software installed on all your devices.
    Kurt Knutsson, FOXNews.com, 10 July 2025
Adjective
  • Each of us should demand our local leaders challenge every one of the immoral and cruel state laws and the Gestapo-like raids and inhumane detainments carried out by ICE agents.
    Letters to the Editor, The Orlando Sentinel, 15 July 2025
  • Even critics who considered his policies cruel and racist – and there were many – admitted that behind the bluster there was the charm of a true believer.
    Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Times, 12 July 2025
Adjective
  • This subsided with unusual speed, however, as cricket fans took instead to sharing the self-deprecatory jokes coming over the border.
    The Economist, The Economist, 22 June 2019
  • Philipps has acquired her 1-million-and-growing Instagram followers through her self-deprecatory humor, raw honesty and vulnerability.
    Sonja Haller, USA TODAY, 11 July 2018
Adjective
  • The notion of any return to normality feels abhorrent just now — a crass, unwelcome intrusion into private grief.
    Andy Jones, New York Times, 6 July 2025
  • While the abhorrent actions that led Cuomo’s fall should alone be disqualifying, there’s also the matter of policy.
    Romen Borsellino, New York Daily News, 24 June 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Scornful.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/scornful. Accessed 21 Jul. 2025.

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