¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Condemnations
1. condemnation [n] - See also: condemnation
Lexicographical Neighbors of Condemnations
Literary usage of Condemnations
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Metric Fallacy: An Investigation of the Claims Made for the Metric by Frederick Arthur Halsey, Samuel Sherman Dale (1920)
"Following are some condemnations of the system from those whose names will command
respect: John Quincy Adams, ..."
2. Forest Owners' Guide to the Federal Income Tax by William C. Siegel, William L. Hoover, Harry L. Haney, Jr., Karen Liu (1996)
"The three basic categories of involuntary losses—physical damage or destruction,
thefts, and condemnations—are discussed in this chapter. ..."
3. The Philological and Biographical Works of Charles Butler, Esquire, of by Charles Butler (1817)
"condemnations of the Five Propositions. THESE five propositions have been repeatedly
condemned : their condemnations by pope Innocent the tenth, ..."
4. History of the Reformation of the Sixteenth Century by Jean Henri Merle d'Aubigné (1879)
"... Libraries—Polemical Conversations—Sarcasm —Royal Decree and Terror—Depositions
and condemnations—Four Martyrs—A Conclave—Charles consoles Wolsey. ..."
5. An exposition of the Creed by John Pearson (1843)
"judge beside our own souls, we should be regardless of our own sentence, and
wholly unconcerned in our own condemnations. But if we were persuaded that ..."