Search for crossword answers and clues
Sling mud
Answer for the clue "Sling mud ", 7 letters:
slander
Alternative clues for the word slander
Word definitions for slander in dictionaries
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
v. charge falsely or with malicious intent; attack the good name and reputation of someone; "The journalists have defamed me!" "The article in the paper sullied my reputation" [syn: defame , smirch , asperse , denigrate , calumniate , smear , sully , besmirch ...
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Slander \Slan"der\, n. [OE. sclandere, OF. esclandre, esclandle, escandre, F. esclandre, fr. L. scandalum, Gr. ??? a snare, stumbling block, offense, scandal; probably originally, the spring of a trap, and akin to Skr. skand to spring, leap. See Scan , ...
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Slander is a false or malicious claim that may harm someone's reputation. Slander may also refer to: Slander of title , which is a species of malicious falsehood relating to real estate Slander of goods , which is another species of malicious falsehood ...
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
I. noun COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES sue (sb) for libel/defamation/negligence/slander etc ▪ Miss James could not afford to sue for libel. ▪ She was suing doctors for negligence over the loss of her child. COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ VERB sue ▪ Dramatists ...
Usage examples of slander.
For this reason one who is in the love of ruling from the love of self thinks nothing of defrauding his neighbor, committing adultery with his wife, slandering him, breathing vengeance on him even to the death, treating him cruelly, and other such deeds.
It was also granted me to perceive that there issued from this enjoyment as from their fountainhead the enjoyments of evils of all kinds, such as adultery, revenge, fraud, slander, and evil-doing in general.
Uncle --I Part from Marcoline and Set Out for Paris--An Amorous Journey Thus freed from the cares which the dreadful slanders of Possano had caused me, I gave myself up to the enjoyment of my fair Venetian, doing all in my power to increase her happiness, as if I had had a premonition that we should soon be separated from one another.
I have heard bruited by the envious that they were, ah, more intimate than boon companions, I take to be political slander?
The one true magical system we do have is the Jewish cabbala, kept alive by a people of enormous courage in the face of slander and persecution.
He did not admire fine wits, good jests or criticism, because it easily turns to slander, and he would laugh at the folly of men reading newspapers which, in his opinion, always lied and constantly repeated the same things.
She did not let go my hands till we got to the corner of their street, when the mother called out to the coachman to stop, not wishing to give her neighbours occasion for slander by stopping in front of their own house.
Voltaire returned once more to his distinguished guests, and enraptured them again by his witty slanders and brilliant conversation.
But General Grant had the good fortune, in great degree denied to his predecessors, to see his political enemies withdraw their unfounded aspersions during his lifetime, to see his calumniators become his personal and official eulogists, practically retracting the slanders and imputations to which they had given loose tongue when the object at stake was his defeat for the Presidency.
For the treasonous speeches he has given, for the slander of our good rulers Elrad Leth and Tassis Gayle, and for his constant refusal to act for the good of Aramoor, Del Lotts will be beheaded.
My first question to Cordiani was in reference to the slander contained in the letter he threatened to deliver to my brother: he answered that it was no slander, for he had been a witness to everything that had taken place in the morning through a hole he had bored in the garret just above your bed, and to which he would apply his eye the moment he knew that I was in your room.
He acknowledged that his letter might be a slander, that he had acted treacherously, and he pledged his honour never to attempt obtaining from me by violence favours which he desired to merit only by the constancy of his love.
I told my friends that it was necessary for me to shew myself, so as to give the lie to all that had been reported about me by slandering tongues.
The young man was delighted to travel, and never had any suspicion of the way in which I had slandered him.
She said that as I had refused her hand she would not run the risk of incurring censure or slander of any kind.