English to Portuguese Dictionary denounce

denounce

denunciar
definition
verb
the Assembly denounced the use of violence
publicly declare to be wrong or evil.
translation of 'denounce'
verb
declarar,
delatar,
denunciar,
proclamar,
profetizar,
condenar
example
The writers say they were tortured and forced to publicly 'denounce' their work.
The zealots got the upper hand and science was 'denounced' as heresy.
Of course these photos are going to be 'denounced' as fakes.
He is brought to jail; she publicly 'denounces' him; and the court sentences him to six months in prison.
The colonists were interested in neither of these projects and Grey was 'denounced' as an out-of-touch theorist.
Oratory is praised as the literature of the people and 'denounced' as the instrument of the demagogue.
Often, when I have responded to some of this stuff, I've gotten an immediate, mortified apology - as though the 'denouncer' didn't quite realize that he or she was engaged in something more than a symbolic exercise.
As government workers, they should have shunned the 'denouncement' of the impeachment, which is a sort of intervention in politics, especially around the time of the approaching general elections.
The year 1642 was largely taken up with answering tracts written against him and a fellow Frenchman, Samuel Desmarets, by his 'denouncer' at Utrecht, Voetius.
The weather forecast was 'denounced' as useless by the locals.
There were suggestions, 'denounced' as ludicrous by a raft of academic luminaries, that her research did not make the grade.
Survivors were 'denounced' as traitors and suffered severe discrimination.
He was 'denounced' as a traitor, that is, by criminals.
What if the secret services 'denounced' someone based upon information extracted under torture?
As Osa dancers perform a stick dance meant to conjure up the spirits of their ancestors, organizers say the festive season is not a 'denouncement' of Western Christian values.
Any outside suggestion that reform was overdue was 'denounced' as an assault on our sovereignty.
Weir was arrested and confessed to sorcery; his sister Grizel was 'denounced' as a witch.
If he has not abused his authority and betrayed children, he is still guilty of not 'denouncing' those who did.
Masquerading his message as a typical tale of lovers spurned and yearned, he fashioned a vitriolic 'denouncement' of his countrymen, people whom he saw as being more capable of lying or hiding than fighting.
The records project an image of the 'denouncers' - who, not surprisingly, tended to come from the same milieu as those on whom they informed - as drawn largely from groups at the lower end of the social scale.
Moreover, he sees himself in the tradition of an H. L. Mencken or George S. Schuyler as a satiric 'denouncer' of all forms of cant, quackery, and nonsense.
Of course, I would never think of publicly 'denouncing' a guy just because I don't like the way he draws.
Marisol perhaps needed to distance herself from the rumors and her verbal 'denouncement' of the practice was a good place to start.
Far from being the transport revolution expected, the service was 'denounced' as a shambles, a farce and the last resort.
The most recent action to evacuate was not taken in haste, he declares, and 'denounces' those who say it was.
He has publicly 'denounced' all the wrongs that were levelled on him.
Gambling on cricket is nothing new, and as early as 1823 a match between Hampshire and England was 'denounced' as a fix.
So it is that jokes that might once have been accepted as bad-taste gags can now be 'denounced' as intolerable racial insults.
A planned telephone mast has been 'denounced' as a monstrosity by people in Wootton Bassett.
When money is 'denounced' as the root of all evil, we should properly understand it not as banknotes but as bright, treacherous gold.
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