0 present participle of scorn --
1 to show scorn for someone or something: --
He also never tries to escape from a fight or use trickery to win, believing that doing so is cowardly and scorning anyone who uses such tactics.
If anything, he is scorning the self-coronation of lesser funk royals and inviting his fickle public to spurn him if it dare.
In the lyrics, the speaker addresses a girl who is scorning him because he has nothing.
Scorning the cave map created by the spiders, they send in their own troops.
She turned him into a woodpecker for scorning her love.
In the past few years we have seen the spectacle of a once radical party scorning radicalism and affecting the theories of defunct and old-fashioned economists.
It is no use our scorning the fact that we cannot sell goods to people in other parts of the world who cannot pay for them.
I wonder if it is not the longer imagination which, scorning the criticisms of some of his friends, has kept the country safe financially in these difficult years.