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1 grievend
adj. abusive, offensive; grievous, mournful -
2 grof
adj. rude, crude, coarse; abusive, using foul language; harsh, severe--------adv. rudely, crudely, coarsely; abusively; harshly, roughly -
3 krenkend
adj. outrageous, insulting, abusive -
4 schimprede
n. abusive speech, diatribe -
5 schimpwoord
n. abusive word, four letter word -
6 verkeerd
adj. wrong, perverse, preposterous, faulty, mistaken, incorrect, erroneous, wry, abusive, cockeyed--------adv. wrongly, wrong, amiss, perversely -
7 beledigend
1 offensive (to) ⇒ insulting/abusive (to) -
8 grof
2 [ruw bewerkt] coarse, rough ⇒ crude♦voorbeelden:〈 figuurlijk〉 een eerste, grove indeling • a first, rough divisioniets grof schetsen • 〈 letterlijk〉 make a sketch of something; 〈 figuurlijk ook〉 sketch something in broad outlineseen grove tegenstelling • a glaring contrastzich grof vergissen • make a glaring errorhij werd grof • he became abusiveje hoeft niet meteen grof te worden • there's no need to be rude -
9 hij werd grof
hij werd grof -
10 scheldbrief
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11 schelden
♦voorbeelden:op iemand schelden • scold someone, call someone names2 hij loopt altijd op haar te schelden • he's always finding fault with/ 〈 informeel〉 bitching about herII 〈 overgankelijk werkwoord〉1 [uitschelden] scold, call names
См. также в других словарях:
abusive — abu·sive /ə byü siv, ziv/ adj 1: characterized by wrong or improper use or action abusive tax shelters 2: inflicting verbal or physical abuse abusive parents abu·sive·ly adv Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of L … Law dictionary
Abusive — A*bu sive, a. [Cf. F. abusif, fr. L. abusivus.] 1. Wrongly used; perverted; misapplied. [1913 Webster] I am . . . necessitated to use the word Parliament improperly, according to the abusive acceptation thereof. Fuller. [1913 Webster] 2. Given to … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
abusive — abusive, opprobrious, vituperative, contumelious, scurrilous apply chiefly to language or utterances and to persons as they employ such language: the words agree in meaning coarse, insulting, and contemptuous in character or utterance. Abusive… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
abusive — UK US /əˈbjuːsɪv/ adjective ► using rude and offensive words: »She was sacked for sending an abusive email to a colleague. »abusive calls/comments/language ► involving bad or wrong use of something or treatment of someone, especially for your own … Financial and business terms
Abusive — (lat.), s. u. Abusus … Pierer's Universal-Lexikon
Abusīve — (lat.), mißbräuchlich … Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon
abusive — (adj.) 1530s (implied in abusively), originally improper, from Fr. abusif, from L. abusivus, from abus , pp. stem of abuti (see ABUSE (Cf. abuse) (v.)). Meaning full of abuse is from 1580s. Abuseful was used 17c., and Shakespeare has abusious (… … Etymology dictionary
abusive — [adj] exhibiting unkind behavior or words calumniating, castigating, censorious, contumelious, defamatory, derisive, disparaging, insolent, insulting, invective, libelous, maligning, obloquious, offensive, opprobrious, reproachful, reviling, rude … New thesaurus
abusive — ► ADJECTIVE 1) extremely offensive and insulting. 2) involving cruelty and violence. DERIVATIVES abusively adverb abusiveness noun … English terms dictionary
abusive — [ə byo͞o′siv; ] also [, ə byo͞o′ziv] adj. [Fr abusif < L abusivus < abusus: see ABUSE] 1. involving or characterized by abuse or misuse; abusing; mistreating 2. coarse and insulting in language; scurrilous; harshly scolding abusively adv.… … English World dictionary
abusive — [[t]əbju͟ːsɪv[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED Someone who is abusive behaves in a cruel and violent way towards other people. He became violent and abusive toward Ben s mother. ...her cruel and abusive husband. 2) ADJ GRADED Abusive language is extremely rude … English dictionary