reviler
21Magic in Bartimaeus — Contents 1 Magicians 1.1 Apprenticeship 1.2 Birth names 1.3 …
22Heraclitus — Catherine Osborne No philosopher before Socrates can have had such a profound influence on so many generations of subsequent thinkers as Heraclitus. Nor can any thinker, probably in the whole history of philosophy, have inspired such a wide range …
23hyscend — m ( es/ ) reviler …
24wyrgend — m ( es/ ) reviler, evildoer …
25shrew — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. termagant, scold, virago, vixen, fishwife, henpecker, beldame. See evildoer, female. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. vixen, virago, termagant, spitfire, she devil, scold, porcupine, dragon, fury, fire eater,… …
26revile — re|vile [rıˈvaıl] v [T] written [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: reviler, from vil; VILE] to express hatred of someone or something = ↑hate ▪ The President was now reviled by the same party he had helped to lead …
27revile — (v.) c.1300, from O.Fr. reviler consider vile, despise, from re , intensive prefix, + vil (see VILE (Cf. vile)). Related: Reviled; reviling …
28backbiter — n. Slanderer, defamer, traducer, calumniator, libeller, maligner, reviler, vilifier, detractor …
29calumniator — n. Slanderer, maligner, traducer, defamer, vilifier, reviler, blackener, backbiter, libeller, detractor …
30revile — verb (T) to express hatred of someone or something: The President was now reviled by the very Party he had helped to lead. reviler noun (C) …