0 present participle of condemn --
1 to criticize something or someone strongly, usually for moral reasons: --
After condemning both group studies and individual studies in principle he proceeds to make studies of both kinds impartially.
Seventeen disputes, he noted, were brought by ' parties soliciting from the court an arbitrary sentence as well as a condemning one '.!
Societal reaction, when his conversion was made public many years later, was severe, with most of his family and friends questioning or condemning his decision.
Moreover, both writers adopt a common complaint of the colonizer by condemning the colonized for their constitutional indolence.
This being so, it might seem that the correct response to hate speech is more speech-presumably egalitarian speech condemning hate speech-not the restriction of speech.
The sin is always someone else's for us to condemn and, in condemning, absolve ourselves of guilt.
The writer was not condemning the order per se, only asking to be excused.
By signing up to independence and thus, by implication, condemning ' dependency ', governments deceive and create a smokescreen.