Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
The speech had recently been dug up, rather scurrilously, by Vernon's paper.
It's true that Heidi has been roundly and scurrilously attacked on the internet.
The men gossiped as much and as scurrilously as ourselves.
"Comic Magazine" is a scurrilously funny picture of a technologically advanced society with an insatiable appetite for what's largely irrelevant.
And this composer, having been scurrilously if entertainingly cast as Mozart's murderer in "Amadeus," needs rehabilitation more than most.
Critics said the lawyer, Marvyn M. Kornberg, scurrilously blamed the victim.
Liebermann was scurrilously attacked in anti-semitic cartoons.
The show came direct from a London theatre and featured content so cutting-edge and scurrilously funny that no self-respecting royal would dream of attending".
To avenge the loss of his mask, Shocker has outraged the crowd by scurrilously ripping the masks off his opponents and holding them up like fresh scalps.
But upon the brothers publicly apologising and abandoning the idea, Harmsworth continued to gloat and approve scurrilously libellous articles, provoking the brothers into a libel suit.
According to various satirical songs which scurrilously evoked her amours "the Lady of the Luxembourg" hid several pregnancies, merely shutting herself up in her palace when about to give birth.
And Salieri is a composer in need of reclamation - having been scurrilously, if entertainingly, cast as Mozart's murderer in "Amadeus" - and to some extent worthy of it.
Though Jane - scurrilously known as 'hot-pants'- earned her share of notoriety in that year, she was also a creature of considerable balance and judgement, no fool, certainly not just a pretty face.
In an instant his sword was out of its scabbard, he himself at bay, covering Gilda with his body, and facing the men who had thus scurrilously rushed on him out of the gloom.
Described as "the big one that got away," the conservative press in Buffalo portrayed Ross as a Maoist and atheist who was "scurrilously critical of U.S. policies in Vietnam."
The new palazzo became the home of Innocent's widowed and unpopular sister-in-law Olimpia Maidalchini, who was his confidante and advisor and, more scurrilously, reputed to be his mistress.
During the period of his editorship he was scurrilously known as "Dr. Slop", and was the subject of several satires, of which A Slap at Slop (1820) ran through four editions.
Mr. Cuomo, denouncing Mr. Feldman for "scurrilously" suggesting that Mr. Hynes was a bigot, endorsed Mr. Hynes on Wednesday.
The Miner's Gazette scurrilously describes them as 'filthy, immoral, treacherous and quarrelsome, heathen celestials, who waste water, steal gold, ruin good digging ground, spread leprosy, and practise secret vices on the bodies of white women and white boys.'
While cacō, like any other word relating to malodorous bodily functions, is used scurrilously and abusively in Latin literature, the word cacāre in its literal sense may not have been deeply offensive to the Romans (as opposed to e.g. 'cunire').
When "Comic Magazine" was shown in New York last spring at the New Directors/New Films Festival, Vincent Canby of The Times said, "It's a scurrilously funny picture of a technologically advanced society with an insatiable appetite for what's largely irrelevant."
Morris reportedly said he doesn't believe Congress will impeach the president for lying under oath about his relationship with Monica, "but they might well impeach him if evidence comes forward from woman after woman after woman, of private detectives scurrilously, sometimes illegally, perhaps under physical intimidation, working on stopping these women from telling the truth.