Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
More wounding than the question is the inability to give a coherent answer.
These days, our most wounding blows in England come directly from the stage.
As usual, she was most wounding when she did not mean to be.
I doubt you could have come up with a more wounding remark if you'd funded a study project.
There would be no more wounding, yet I could go to the aid of the other one of my kind.
The beholder turned slightly and focused its wounding eye on Alias.
Beyond any doubt her superiors would applaud victories she found more wounding than defeat.
These remote wounding effects are known as hydrostatic shock.
When the caricature works, it can be far more wounding than a columnist's prose stiletto.
"Xaran took a shot at me last night with its wounding eye," Olive said.
These papers document remote wounding effects for both rifle and pistol levels of energy transfer.
The mask is the mirror neuron's engrained recording of a past wounding experience.
The early genes amplify the wounding signal and can be detected 30 minutes to 2 hours after damage (Ryan 2000).
They would make choking noises, and a wounding comment like: "How on earth did you get the cat to sit on the bottle?"
His wounding note of compassion snapped all at once to bare a core of acid bitterness.
But this bold new determination to salvage Europe's pride after a wounding century is by no means shared by everyone.
It has often been asserted that hydrostatic shock and other descriptions of remote wounding effects are nothing but myths.
A wounding affair with an unnamed man left her feeling blue during the holiday season, and recent deaths of close friends have staggered her.
Unintended malice is the most wounding.
Damask watched his struggles with an expressionless detachment that was more wounding than mockery.
Once again Afra's fingers took a new hold on her arm and she shook her head of such wounding reflections.
It was very wounding."
The "wounding power of slurs" is something the New York Times and sensitive network news types are always on the lookout for.
Jagged stones would have been more wounding, but smooth ones were more predictable in their flight and, ultimately, more lethal.