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Reproving   Listen
Reproving

adjective
1.
Expressing reproof or reproach especially as a corrective.  Synonyms: admonishing, admonitory, reproachful.



Reprove

verb
(past & past part. reproved; pres. part. reproving)
1.
Take to task.  Synonym: admonish.



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"Reproving" Quotes from Famous Books



... months' term in Newgate was still in store for Penn; but after that they gave up this method of reforming him. He spent the next years in exhorting Parliament and reproving princes all over Europe; and in the midst of these labors he met one of the best and most beautiful women in England; she had suitors by the score, but she loved William Penn, and they were married. She was the wife of his mind and soul as well as of his bed and board. He was now doubly ...
— The History of the United States from 1492 to 1910, Volume 1 • Julian Hawthorne

... seeking for man. With the former, God is passive, and man active: with the latter, God is active, man is passive—passive, that is, in so far as his business is to listen when he is spoken to, to look at the light which is unveiled to him, to submit himself to the inward laws which he feels reproving and checking him at every turn, as Socrates was reproved and checked ...
— Alexandria and her Schools • Charles Kingsley

... added. "What a pity that you are not living here, then you would, and then we should have known each other all our lives, instead of only since we went to school together. What good times we had at Madam Flamingo's. There you sit, now, and look as meekly reproving as if you had'nt invented that name for her yourself. It was so good, it has stood by ...
— The Bay State Monthly - Volume 2, Issue 3, December, 1884 • Various

... this aversion to truth; but all may perhaps be said to have it in some degree, because it is inseparable from self-love. It is this false delicacy which makes those who are under the necessity of reproving others choose so many windings and middle courses to avoid offence. They must lessen our faults, appear to excuse them, intersperse praises and evidence of love and esteem. Despite all this, the medicine does not cease ...
— Pascal's Pensees • Blaise Pascal

... what you will, you cannot make yesterday into today. What we did, in the midst of our rejoicing, that was right, and must remain right. Now that our minds have been become more sober again, we can't waste any time reproving ourselves. What we have to think of now is, how shall we do everything right in the future? But you are such a right-minded man that you will know what is right. And you can tell me everything you think, only tell me honestly; if you say what you mean, you won't hurt me, but ...
— The German Classics of The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, Vol. VIII • Various


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