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Answer for the clue "Iran-Contra, e.g. ", 7 letters:
scandal

Alternative clues for the word scandal

Word definitions for scandal in dictionaries

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES doping scandal/ban/test etc ▪ doping offences COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ ADJECTIVE big ▪ The loss of this basic perspective produces the worst problems and the biggest scandal . financial ▪ Melancia, who had been appointed ...

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
" Scandal " is a short story by Willa Cather . It was first published in Century in 1919.

Wiktionary Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. An incident or event that disgraces or damages the reputation of the persons or organization involved. vb. 1 (context obsolete English) To treat opprobriously; to defame; to slander. 2 (context obsolete English) To scandalize; to offend.

Usage examples of scandal.

Arthur Andersen, the once-revered accounting firm, evaporated overnight as its role in the debacle led to a subsidiary scandal of its own.

But a scandal developed: while some scholars, notably John Allegro, published their texts relatively quickly, others took much longer.

The expurgated details of the scandal she had been retailing to her daughter had included the usual maid.

It was at this latter house, one evening three or four days after his meeting with Hortensia in the park, that the chance was afforded him at last of vindicating her honor in a manner that need not add to the scandal that was already abroad, nor serve to couple his name with hers unduly.

If he were to learn his betrothed was masquerading about London as her twin, and with Saxford, it would cause quite a scandal.

I was nominated by the Prime Minister, I had no idea that I was accepting the Mastership of an academic auction-room nor that I was ending a career marked, I am proud to say, by the utmost adherence to the rules of probity in public life by becoming an accessory to a financial scandal of national proportions.

To the credit of all of the enlisted men of the Regular Army referred to, who received commissions in the volunteer service, all served honorably and were mustered out without bringing any scandal of any sort upon the service.

Although Peppino was its only representative at that time, and as, by an old family tradition, he bore a title different from the patronymic title of Pope Urban VII, the sale of the celebrated palace had called forth a scandal to which it was essential to put an end.

GLAAD began issuing bulletins and alerts almost daily, seeking to steer the direction of media coverage and encourage journalists not to stray too far from the approved line that the scandal was indeed about pedophilia, and that it had come about because of the see-no-evil policies of that despised enemy of gay rights, the Catholic Church.

Louisa was now the wife of Sir Humphrey Quain, with no breath of scandal attaching to her name, but there had been a day, in her mad teens, when the town hummed with gossip about her.

A politically savvy cynic could wonder if a more restrictive regime was gaining a foothold on Earth, taking advantage of the Restorationist scandal.

But certainly there had been no scandal about Schwartz and expense accounts which was general knowledge, or which had officially engaged the attention of the authorities.

Now it is worse to sin in public than in private, both because a public sinner seems to sin more from contempt, and because by sinning he gives scandal to others.

If the media ever found out that Slattery had handed the Russians to the Mafia, that he had made murder possible, both he and the bureau would have been sliced, diced, and tat toed Calling it a scandal would be like calling Vietnam a skirmish.

William Golding risks a trigamy scandal by divorcing his fourth wife, marrying and divorcing his fifth, and then marrying his sixth in the space of a week.