Lexicographical Neighbors of Pejorated
Literary usage of Pejorated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Revolution by Sir George Otto Trevelyan (1908)
"And the worst men, (was there a degree above the superlative,) would still be
pejorated by having been fellow-soldiers with that discipline-hating, ..."
2. The Reformation by George Park Fisher (1896)
"... to the councils, or to the fathers. For a while, chiliastic and apocalyptic
theories prevailed among them. Discordant political tendencies pejorated the ..."
3. History of the Manufacture of Iron in All Ages: And Particularly in the by James Moore Swank (1892)
"... the earth and the lead, though how the lead was pejorated I did not see ; then
calcined, afterwards ground fine, and then mixed by fire with copper. ..."
4. The Chautauquan by Chautauqua Institution (1908)
"They would, he says, "be pejorated by having been fellow soldiers with that
discipline-hating, good- living-loving, to eternal fame damned, ..."
5. As Others See Us: A Study of Progress in the United States by John Graham Brooks (1908)
"A military patriot from New Jersey gives his opinion of the corrupting influence
of Pennsylvania soldiers. They would, he says, "be pejorated ..."
6. A Memoir of the Life of William Livingston: Member of Congress in 1774, 1775 by Theodore Sedgwick (1833)
"And the worst men (was there a degree above the superlative) would be still
pejorated, by having been fellow-soldiers with that discipline-hating, ..."