traducing
21traducement — noun The act of traducing; slander, calumny. Rome must know / The value of her own: twere a concealment / Worse than a theft, no less than a traducement, / To hide your doings; and to silence that, / Which, to the spire and top of praises vouchd …
22Heteroglosia — El término heteroglosia describe la coexistencia de distintas variedades dentro de un único código lingüístico . En griego hetero = diferente + glossa = lengua, idioma. De esta manera, el término se traduce del ruso разноречие [raznorechie]… …
23libelous — li·bel·ous also li·bel·lous / lī bə ləs/ adj: constituting or including libel a libelous magazine article Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. libelous …
24traduce — (v.) 1530s, to alter, change over, transport, from L. traducere change over, convert, originally lead along or across, transfer, from trans across (see TRANS (Cf. trans )) + ducere to lead (see DUKE (Cf. duke) (n.)). Sense of defame, slander… …
25traduce — [[t]trədju͟ːs, AM du͟ːs[/t]] traduces, traducing, traduced VERB: usu passive If someone has been traduced, unpleasant and untrue things have deliberately been said about them. [FORMAL] [be V ed] We have been traduced in the press as xenophobic… …
26aspersion — n. Calumny, detraction, censure, slander, defamation, abuse, vituperation, obloquy, reproach, reflection, backbiting, reviling, traducing. See preceding verb …
27depreciation — n. 1. Fall in price, diminution of value, decline in value, fall, decline. 2. Detraction, disparagement, derogation, belittling, traducing, maligning, censure …
28obloquy — n. Reproach, detraction, odium, censure, blame, calumny, contumely, slander, defamation, backbiting, traducing, aspersion, reviling …
29calumny — slander, *detraction, backbiting, scandal Analogous words: aspersion, reflection, *animadversion, stricture: defaming or defamation, maligning, traducing, vilifying or vilification, libeling or libel (see corresponding verbs at MALIGN vb)… …
30detraction — detraction, backbiting, calumny, slander, scandal arecomparable when they denote either the offense of one who defames another or casts aspersions upon him or what is uttered by way of defamation or aspersion. Detraction stresses the injurious… …