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Our son is mistakenly following church, making moral judgments?
Answer for the clue "Our son is mistakenly following church, making moral judgments? ", 10 letters:
censorious
Alternative clues for the word censorious
Word definitions for censorious in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Censorious \Cen*so"ri*ous\, a. [L. censorius pertaining to the censor. See Censor .] Addicted to censure; apt to blame or condemn; severe in making remarks on others, or on their writings or manners. A dogmatical spirit inclines a man to be consorious of ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
a. 1 Addicted to censure and scolding; apt to blame or condemn; severe in making remarks on others, or on their writings or manners. 2 Implying or expressing censure.
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adjective EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES ▪ Horowitz had been censorious of the peace movement in the 1960s. EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ And exposing himself to that censorious and supercilious gaze? ▪ Atalanta tries to blunt the censorious attitude, telling of ...
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adj. harshly critical or expressing censure; "was censorious of petty failings"
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"fond of criticizing," 1530s, from Latin censorius "pertaining to a censor," also "rigid, severe," from censor (see censor (n.)). Related: Censoriously ; censoriousness .
Usage examples of censorious.
Another door on the left, varnished and dark: she imagines a censorious ear pressed against it from the inside, a creaking, as if of weight shifting from foot to foot.
The unspeakable folly of the English bishops in denouncing and silencing the most effective preachers in the national church had betrayed Whitefield into his most easily besetting sin, that of censorious judgment, and his sweeping counter-denunciations of the Episcopalian clergy in general as unconverted closed to him many hearts and pulpits that at first had been hospitably open to him.
The annual loss is computed, by a writer of an inquisitive but censorious temper, at upwards of eight hundred thousand pounds sterling.
I fear with some reason, that female conversation is too frequently tinctured with a censorious spirit, and that ladies are seldom apt to discover much tenderness for the errors of a fallen sister.
Airy, viewy, aloof, dignified, censorious, yet in a light and gay manner, he had always been good company.
He closed the door behind him, to shut off the censorious eyes of Kinnikinick, and kissed her profoundly, holding her small frail figure close to him, conscious of her fine springy back.
Within that eternity, she heard the censorious murmurs, the titters of amusement and the throat-clearings of disapproval that had dogged her entire painful adolescence.
But it is a censorious world, and I can only speak positively of my own sensations in his company.
For although her conversation, baldly recorded here, may suggest that Miss McGuckin was censorious and demanding, it must be remembered that she was only eighteen, and the charm of youth clouded the sharp outlines of her essential character.
First Amendment has been effectively repealed for conservative speech by a censorious, accusatory mob.
As she laid it carefully on the table she studied Nicholas closely and then moved her censorious expression to Sarah.
By the time I was ready to go home I had learned a few tricks about emergency book evacuation procedures (page 34), read about the aims of the Bowdlerizers (page 62), a group of well-meaning yet censorious individuals hell-bent on removing obscenities from fiction.
Caiden, but most of my tenants are middle class and rather censorious, and do not consider the maintenance of young women in bachelor apartments as an asset to the general community.
They must think of me as a fusty old dragon crouched on an ill-gotten hoard—some gaunt dog-in-the-manger, some desiccated, censorious wardress, a prim-lipped keeper of the keys, guarding the dungeon in which starved Laura is chained to the wall.
It is the lawyer's business to create such a doubt if he can, and we must not be too censorious if, in his eagerness to raise this in the minds of the jury, he sometimes oversteps the bounds of propriety, appeals to popular prejudices and emotions, makes illogical deductions from the evidence, and impugns the motives of the prosecution.