1. spurning - Noun
2. spurning - Verb
of Spurn
Source: Webster's dictionaryAnd see! she stirs! She starts,-she moves,-she seems to feel The thrill of life along her keel, And, spurning with her foot the ground, With one exulting, joyous bound, She leaps into the ocean's arms! Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Upon the Road the hidden stands revealed. Each sees and knows the villainy of each. And yet there is, with that great revelation, no turning back, no spurning of each other, no shakiness upon the Road. The Road goes forward into day. Alice Bailey
Belle further inflamed matters by spurning the Indians and signing a large free agent contract with the White Sox in 1997. Source: Internet
Narcissus, however, was appalled and, spurning her, exclaimed, ‘Hands off! Source: Internet
But like other modern historians spurning traditional, often-fawning, “great men” approaches to our past, Coe devotes significant attention to Washington’s role as an enslaver. Source: Internet
Normally, it is about spurning the use of a language that defames, holds in contempt, hurts, ridicules, or damages the interests of ethnic, racial, religious or political groups. Source: Internet