The condemnation of the continuous aggression of this country is not enough, something else should be done.
Our school condemns all bullying behavior.
Justification is the opposite of condemnation. Condemnation means that a man has been charged with a crime, his guilt is established, and accordingly the law pronounces upon him sentence of punishment. On the contrary, justification means that the accused is found to be guiltless, the law has nothing against him, and therefore he is acquitted and exonerated, leaving the court without a stain upon his character. I was looking for the answer too, and this is what I found after a quick look.
Social condemnation refers to a strong and general dislike by the public. While social condemnation does not lead to legal consequences, the impact can be devastating.
Perdition:condemnatory judgment,damnation,reprobation,condemnation,doom
Having convicted the man of murder, the jury voted to condemn him. The minister's policy was to condemn the sin but pardon the sinner. The manager would often condemn me to cleanup duties in the kitchen.
We can use it in a sentence as. I am sorry, but I can not censure this.
I need a sentence with the word condemnation in it.
A king can exile someone through condemnation.
"They will soon go into condemnation", the doctor said.
Such treatment deserves condemnation from the Church's pastors wherever it occurs.
For his treasonous act, Benedict Arnold faced condemnation by the American people. There was widespread international condemnation of the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1980.
Everywhere Hester from "The Scarlet Letter" looked, she found only condemnation from her townspeople.
The student who tried to get people on the internet to do his homework for him earned his teacher's condemnation.
I am not certain what word you are trying to write. It might be condemnation, which means expressing strong disaproval. His condemnation of her actions was hard to bear.
The politician's scandalized behavior resulted in outrage and condemnation from the public.
It is used to pass a judgment on another person; also, it is used to state that someone is guilty of some crime. Such as, "I condemn you to a life sentence in prison."
No, it is not. Doom is a noun (death, condemnation) or a verb (to sentence or submit one to doom).The past participle doomed can be used as an adjective.
condemnation, disgrace