There is not so much filth in any other comedy of this century, and the trio of authors stand stigmatised for their attempt to bring in the old corruption.
Had not the glorious Elizabeth stigmatisedthem as "rogues," and the sagacious James as "vagabonds?
Failing what Junius stigmatised as the "spur of the Press," the right men in the right numbers were not to be procured.
The utter incapacity of the human refuse dumped into the fleet is justly stigmatised by one indignant commander, himself a patient long-sufferer in that respect, as a "scandalous abuse of the service.
How many offences had it heard stigmatised by his lordship as the most heinous that had ever been brought before him in his judicial capacity!
As he was an orator, and by no means a great one, being stigmatised as "loquacious" by Cicero, it is probable that his history suffered from a rhetorical colouring.
The most noticeable point of metre is his disregard of the final s, no less than thrice in the first ninety lines, a practice which in later life he stigmatised as subrusticum.
He will always be stigmatised as the executioner of the Duc d'Enghien, one ready to go any lengths in blind obedience to his master's behests.
He publicly expressed his abhorrence of the so-called Freethinkers, whom he stigmatisedas 'Pests of Society.
Thus Cudworth, Tillotson, Locke, and Samuel Clarke were stigmatised as Deists by their enemies.
The ancient world absorbed all interests, and the Italians with one will shook themselves free of the medieval style they never rightly understood, and which they henceforth stigmatised as barbarous.
An age which has ceased to value impartiality of judgment will soon cease to value accuracy of statement; and when credulity is inculcated as a virtue, falsehood will not long be stigmatised as a vice.
Tertullian described the intermarriage as fornication;(770) and after the triumph of the Church, the intermarriage of Jews and Christians was made a capital offence, and was stigmatised by the law as adultery.
Unfaltering belief being taught as the first of duties, and all doubt being usually stigmatised as criminal or damnable, a state of mind is formed to which we find no parallel in other fields.
In general, however, it was stigmatised as unquestionably a vice, but it was treated with a levity we can now hardly conceive.
Many were stigmatised as Tolandists; but the disciples of a man who never procured for their prophet a bit of dinner or a new wig, for he was frequently wanting both, were not to be feared as enthusiasts.
The irregular conduct which Bolingbroke stigmatised as a breach of trust, was attributed to a desire of perpetuating the work of his friend, who might have capriciously destroyed it.
For his intercourse with Jews and Arabians, his independence towards the Pope and his free disposal of the clerical revenues, he has beenstigmatised as an Atheist.
For daring to think for himself, and asking how the Aristotelian doctrine of the eternity of the world could be reconciled with the dogma of creation, he was stigmatised as an atheist.
Colbert stigmatised the facts as "things too execrable to be put on paper; amounting to sacrilege, profanity and abomination.
An old writer stigmatised the prison as a terrible ulcer that no one dared look at and which poisoned the air for four hundred yards around.
That surely they could not be called rebels, as they marched under the royal flag of Portugal; but Luis do Rego might be reasonably stigmatised as such, for he had fired on that banner.
This is stigmatised by the Portuguese as licensing desertion, from the army of the King and Cortes; whatever they may call it, I am convinced that the measure tends to the present tranquillity of the capital.
Father Pinamonti's Hell Open to Christians is stigmatised as "repulsive," and its pictures as "revolting.
Yet the ghost story of Mrs. Booth's daughter is discredited, and even stigmatised as discreditable, while the brain-sick fancies of Mary Magdalene are treated as accurate history.
In America the powers of self-government were too often seized by a faction, and a political opposition, even in a most moderate form, was stigmatised as felony and punished as treason.
Such laws are useless: they outrage the common sentiments of mankind--more criminal than the offences they intend to prevent: they belong to what Lord Bacon stigmatised as "the rubrics of blood.
The same gentleman has another peculiarity; it does not deserve to be stigmatised a weakness, its nature is so amiable.
The students were regarded as the upper class in the town and the citizens were stigmatised by the contemptuous epithet of "Philistines.
This unsophisticated glance into things, this outbreak of a healthy nature which must of necessity take place in an unspoilt youth, has been stigmatised by a name which is intended to depreciate the idealistic impulses of youth.
In many quarters the action of Russia was stigmatised as the outcome of ambition and greed, rendered all the more odious by the cloak of philanthropy which she had hitherto worn.
The more servile part of the German Press improved on these suggestions, and stigmatised the Bulgarian Revolution of the ensuing autumn as an affair trumped up at London.
But since you have stigmatised all these loyal gentlemen in the same manner, I must bear the reproach as best I can.
They found that there were "real grounds" for some legislation of the kind that the chief secretary, unconscious of what his cabinet was so rapidly to come to, had stigmatised as the policy of blackmail.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "stigmatised" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.