What's the difference between disdained and garron?

Disdained


Definition:

  • (imp. & p. p.) of Disdain
  • (a.) Disdainful.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) People praying, voicing their views and heart, were met with disdain and a level of force exceeding what was needed.
  • (2) Fred had to be substituted to shield him from the crowd’s disdain.
  • (3) It may have been like punk never ‘appened, but you caught a whiff of the movement’s scorched earth puritanism in the mocking disdain with which Smash Hits addressed rock-star hedonism.
  • (4) TV's Jeremy Paxman didn't even bother hiding his disdain for the introduction of weather reports to Newsnight – "It's April.
  • (5) It shows that we still have some way to go to end bigoted banter.” The exchange was also met with disdain on Twitter.
  • (6) He has frequently tested the patience of Japan's conservative sumo authorities with his disdain for the rules of engagement in the ring and his bad behaviour off it.
  • (7) His comic adventures are too many to relate, but it may be said that they culminate in a café of 'singing waiters' where, after a wealth of comic 'business' with the tray, he shows his disdain for articulate speech by singing a vividly explicit song in gibberish.
  • (8) Immigration has been used as a 21st-century incomes policy, mixing a liberal sense of free for all with a free-market disdain for clear and effective rules.
  • (9) Riva, the oldest nominee ever for best actress category, has a very Gallic disdain for such public adulation.
  • (10) "Historians will pore over his many speeches to black audiences," wrote Ta-Nahisi Coates at The Atlantic, and "they will see a president who sought to hold black people accountable for their communities, but was disdainful of those who looked at him and sought the same".
  • (11) Born in July 1954, Christopher Murray Paul-Huhne (his surname until he went to Oxford) has always been something of a Marmite politician, attracting both loyalty and affection, as well as brickbats and disdain.
  • (12) Gil Eliyahu, who stopped working for Binyamin and Sara Netanyahu two and a half years ago, is threatening to sue the couple, claiming he was treated with "humiliating" disdain.
  • (13) It was one of at least half a dozen such unionist experiments, with a variety of partners, which foundered on the rocks of the would-be partners' infirmity of purpose, fear, suspicion and disdain of this bizarre, arrogant, impetuous upstart.
  • (14) Safronkov reserved his fiercest disdain for the UK envoy, Matthew Rycroft, who had said that UK scientists had determined that sarin had been used in the Khan Sheikhun attack and called on Russia to cut ties with Assad, who Rycroft said was bringing Moscow only “shame and humiliation”.
  • (15) The rules extended from healthcare to the environment to workplace safety, but all were grounded in Bush's disdain for the government's role as a regulatory authority.
  • (16) Stevenson did not disdain the genre in which he was operating.
  • (17) Issues Sir Ken, on the other hand, is a professional Yorkshireman and farmer - the sort of chap who prefers to call a retail outlet a shop and treated press and City with equal disdain.
  • (18) The pent-up fury of the parents reflected the intensity of the violent protests that marked a dramatic week in Mexico, which has deepened the political crisis facing President Enrique Peña Nieto as he returns from a week-long trip to China and Australia, seen by many as a sign of disdain for the suffering and anger at home.
  • (19) What is clear now, for those for whom it was ever in doubt, is the reality of Tory values: the disdain with which they view the less fortunate and the reason why the annual cull of the impoverished through malnutrition and hypothermia is not a problem to them.
  • (20) Instead – spoiler alert – to the disdain of many, it opted for a more satisfying, upbeat conclusion.

Garron


Definition:

  • (n.) Same as Garran.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) From this, Garrone takes his opening of the film, in order to pastiche a massively overblown wedding for Enzo, the returning star of Big Brother made good, and to send up the absurdity of the show generally.
  • (2) It is a strong and glorious tradition in Italian cinema, from the realist school that followed the second world war, epitomised by Roberto Rossellini , to the political drama of Francesco Rosi (which Garrone took to the criminal underground in Gomorrah ).
  • (3) This dramatic atmosphere in turn generates a theatre of everyday life, as Garrone's films vividly illustrate.
  • (4) And just as our great moments in cinema concern stammering monarchs, so the likes of Garrone choose to examine criminality, and now the fetid scourge of reality TV.
  • (5) Some people who were shown just one message couldn’t believe it, so to receive thousands is difficult.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Garron Helm was jailed in 2014 for sending this antisemitic tweet to Berger.
  • (6) Garrone's trademark long, lingering shots give the actors free rein to create that same sense of dramatic spontaneity he achieved in Gomorrah .
  • (7) After the success of Gomorrah , Garrone was petitioned from many quarters to make another mafia film.
  • (8) In August, Luciana Berger, the shadow health minister, received a message on Twitter from a 21-year-old neo-Nazi, Garron Helm, that showed her with the Star of David on her head.
  • (9) With this in mind, I watch recordings of some of the plays in which Arena was acting when Garrone – Punzo's close friend – came to Volterra to see for himself this work with prisoners.
  • (10) Garrone's first notion was to cast Arena as – effectively – his real self, a killer.
  • (11) It could be Garrone's credo – getting people from the streets to play themselves, and directing actors to perform so close to reality that the disbelief is suspended; you think you are watching the real world.
  • (12) Garrone wanted Arena to play a role in Gomorrah – as a hit man, indeed – but the parole board ruled this beyond the pale.
  • (13) He was the dignified gangster in The Consequences of Love (2004), the slippery, cadaverous prime minister in Il Divo (released in 2008, the same year he starred as the chilling crime boss in Matteo Garrone's Gomorrah ).
  • (14) There was only one actor Garrone could consider for the lead role: he wanted to try again to cast the prisoner in Volterra whom his friend had nurtured.
  • (15) Brilliant films from Paolo Sorrentino and Matteo Garrone appeared to conjure up a new Italian wave, while the resurfacing of painful suppressed memories of the Nicolae Ceausescu regime drove an extraordinary flowering of Romanian cinema.
  • (16) The Grand Prix (widely perceived as the runners-up award) went to Reality, Matteo Garrone's satire on reality TV, which met with a far more muted reception from critics than Gomorrah, his mafia hit from 2008.
  • (17) Reality is the work of Italy's most compelling film director by far: Matteo Garrone, whose unrelenting cinematic depiction of the Comorra, Gomorrah , was among the finest films made anywhere during recent years.
  • (18) Investigations ranged from the phylogenetic origin of fibroblasts in sponges, studied by R. Garrone, to the phenotypic modulations leading to the "myofibroblast" reported by G. Gabbiani, whose manuscript was unfortunately received too late for the conference.
  • (19) Garrone's award was genuinely unexpected, perhaps reflecting the common cultural ground between him and the jury president.
  • (20) Norwegian director Joachim Trier’s first English language feature, starring Isabelle Huppert and Jesse Eisenberg, will also premiere at the festival, as well the first English film – the 17th century-set The Tale of Tales – by Matteo Garrone.

Words possibly related to "disdained"

Words possibly related to "garron"