We condemn the book because it contains false, calumnious, and rash propositions which lead to anarchy; which are contrary to the word of God; which are impious, scandalous, and erroneous; and which the Church already condemned . ..
22.
Here RABaD is not content with merely correcting the statement of Maimonides, but he declares that, in his opinion, Maimonides deserves the ban for the calumnious views he expresses concerning these Biblical personages ( Yad .'Akum, xi . 4 ).
23.
Now, not only do I find it highly calumnious when my ability to edit neutrally is questioned by people who falsify data, but for me to be deemed a " Nazi " is exceptionally so, given the nature of my contributions to this project.
24.
Americans gripe about pushy New Yorkers, provincial Bostonians, or laid-back Californians, but " chilango " takes all the best and worst qualities of a population _ aggressive, demanding, slimy, and calumnious _ and wraps them into one word.
25.
Starting on Saturday, the Vatican will take the extraordinary step of opening to scholars part of its secret archives ahead of schedule in a bid to silence what it says are unjust and " calumnious " attacks against a man it is considering for possible sainthood.
26.
In 1945, Togliatti and the PCI, while advocating the freedom of real fascists, petitioned in the CLN to have the leaders of the Internationalist Communist Party condemned to death as saboteurs and with the calumnious label of agents of the Gestapo; they included Damen in their list of its leaders.
27.
Eagerly drinking this in, the menacing madman [ Valens ], to whom nothing ought to have been permitted, since he thought that everything, even what was unjust, was allowed him, inexorably summoned from the farthest boundaries of the empire all those whom the accuser, exempt from the laws, with profound assurance had insisted ought to be brought before him, and ordered a calumnious trial to be set on foot.
28.
According to Rodrigo Jim�nez de Rada, this division was instigated by the factitious Manrique P�rez de Lara of Castile and Fernando P�rez de Traba of Le�n, who, the historian says, " aimed to sow the seed of discord thereby . " According to Rodrigo, Ferdinand II, in response to calumnious accusations at court, confiscated the fiefs of some of his leading magnates, who then went into exile at the court of Sancho III, seeking redress.