abusive+language

  • 1abusive language — index diatribe, obloquy, phillipic, slander, vilification Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …

    Law dictionary

  • 2Abusive language (law) — The use of abusive language to another person is illegal in a number of U.S. states.[1][2] Offenders are typically charged with this offense in conjunction with other crimes, such as aggressive driving or assault. However, in 1989 the New York… …

    Wikipedia

  • 3abusive language — offensive language, foul language …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 4abusive language — Cruelty amounting to a ground for divorce, where it is so intense as to cause mental suffering sufficient to impair health. 24 Am J2d Div & S § 48 …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 5abusive — abusive, opprobrious, vituperative, contumelious, scurrilous apply chiefly to language or utterances and to persons as they employ such language: the words agree in meaning coarse, insulting, and contemptuous in character or utterance. Abusive… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 6abusive — abu·sive /ə byü siv, ziv/ adj 1: characterized by wrong or improper use or action abusive tax shelters 2: inflicting verbal or physical abuse abusive parents abu·sive·ly adv Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of L …

    Law dictionary

  • 7language — I noun communication, composition, dialect, expression, faculty of speech, folk speech, form of expression, formulation, idiom, jargon, lingua, linguistics, means of communication, oral, oratio, parlance, phrasing, phraseology, rhetoric, sermo,… …

    Law dictionary

  • 8abusive — [[t]əbju͟ːsɪv[/t]] 1) ADJ GRADED Someone who is abusive behaves in a cruel and violent way towards other people. He became violent and abusive toward Ben s mother. ...her cruel and abusive husband. 2) ADJ GRADED Abusive language is extremely rude …

    English dictionary

  • 9abusive — adjective Date: 1583 1. characterized by wrong or improper use or action; especially corrupt < abusive financial practices > 2. a. using harsh insulting language < an angry and abusive crowd > b. characterized …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 10abusive — [əˈbjuːsɪv] adj 1) offensive or insulting Syn: rude abusive language[/ex] When we asked him to leave, he became abusive.[/ex] 2) treating someone in a cruel way, either by being violent or by forcing them to have sex an abusive parent[/ex]&#8230; …

    Dictionary for writing and speaking English