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viperous
/ ˈvaɪpərəs /
adjective
- Alsoviperineˈvaɪpəˌraɪn of, relating to, or resembling a viper
- malicious
Derived Forms
- ˈviperously, adverb
Other Words From
- viper·ous·ly adverb
- pseudo·viper·ous adjective
- pseudo·viper·ous·ly adverb
Example Sentences
As Agnes, Katigbak delivers a measured prattle, her negging neither as viperous nor as offhand as Albee’s text gives the character license to be.
Alec Baldwin appears as the viperous Blake, a hot shot from the home office who schleps down to the Sheepshead Bay branch to lead a sales meeting that amounts to eight straight minutes of vicious verbal abuse.
Artists foreign and domestic have been depicting the war here head-on since the origins of the fighting actually began eight years ago — in the Ukrainian director Sergei Loznitsa’s viperous satire “Donbass,” in Serhiy Zhadan’s raw novel “The Orphanage,” or in the Polish photographer Wiktoria Wojciechowska’s profound, prize-drenched war series “Sparks.”
As compensation, we might get the deliciously viperous instead, just for the engaging fun of it, but there too the current roster is not delivering.
I was particularly disappointed by Tatiana Maslany, as the viperous young exec Diana Christensen, who would sell her soul for ratings if only she had one to begin with.
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