1. decrying - Noun
2. decrying - Verb
of Decry
Source: Webster's dictionaryNothing is more usual and more natural for those, who pretend to discover anything new to the world in philosophy and the sciences, than to insinuate the praises of their own systems, by decrying all those, which have been advanced before them. David Hume
A litany of the party’s most reliable hits took the stage, from a teacher railing against unions, to a small business owner thanking Trump, to the president’s eldest son Don Jr. decrying the supposed rise of socialism thanks to Democratic mayors. Source: Internet
But Chinese nationalists erupted against BTS, decrying the group’s failure to also applaud the PRC’s soldiers, who sought to kill, capture, and enslave South Koreans a couple generations ago. Source: Internet
Armed with Israeli flags, signs decrying the prime minister’s alleged corruption and a lot of spirit, the protesters spent the night calling for Bibi to quit and dreaming of a different government. Source: Internet
As the United States was decrying the actions of Germany’s Adolf Hitle, Hurston was clear about America’s problem with racial inequality. Source: Internet
For 78 minutes, Trump went on to extol a “Great American Comeback” on his watch, just three years after he took office decrying a land of “American carnage” under his predecessor. Source: Internet