Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
"The last thing you and I need right now is to give the scandalmongers more ammunition!"
In that regard, many of us - even some scandalmongers - draw a line between private life and public conduct.
"Be happy, lest anyone think you're bothered by the scandalmongers."
Is she a serious biographer or a scandalmonger digging up dirt?
When she arrived home, the scandalmongers having been at work, Millay was even more legendary.
John F. Kennedy is now being kicked around by scandalmongers.
That was one way they could help, because it allowed Honor to keep her own security people scrupulously away from the scandalmonger.
Thom's burglar might just fit the role of scandalmonger very well.
"I never realized the chit was such a scandalmonger."
Finally, the scandalmongers are derogated by historians as making much fuss over nothing.
And, as the world is full of scandal, one cannot be too careful not to give the scandalmongers anything to exercise their wicked spite upon.
As a card-carrying scandalmonger, I am moved to ask: Where's the scandal?
Eyrdway's quite taken with pretending to be a famous scandalmonger.
True, also-and easily to be verified by any scandalmonger.
At that moment Sir Peter arrives to prove the report wrong, and orders the scandalmongers out of his house.
He also became the target of scandalmongers.
'Let the old scandalmongers have their field day.
-- They were simple scandalmongers, that familiar, and all!
Meantime, it rejoiced me that poor Margaret's name had been thus rescued from the fangs of the scandalmongers.
'He's a scandalmonger,' he said softly, moving closer, making her pulses rocket.
Spiteful gossips, scandalmongers, churls and hypocrites - please read on, if you dare.
"That scandalmonger Walpole says she could have turned the Duke's head if her lashes had only been three-quarters of a yard long."
They're the ones with the soaring 401(k) accounts, and those fat kittens rarely blow their whistles to scandalmongers.
"I am not a scandalmonger," said Pimkin, removing a crumb from his waistcoat.
Jane Wilson, a friend of Eliza Millward and scandalmonger.