Blaspheme in a sentence as a verb

I hate to blaspheme Dijkstra, but I've never quite agreed with that quote.

It's an unforgivable sin to blaspheme against one, but not the others.

US has good press freedom, but they also, like every country, will **** you if you "blaspheme" against them too much.

On this holy day, when Jobs was so good to the world he sent his own son, you choose to blaspheme that Apple did not invent the App?

It's amazing how so many people who "don't" believe in God blaspheme at the earliest opportunity.

Freedom of association is far more important to society than the harm done by a CEO who blasphemes or pays people to blaspheme.

And of course, woke disciples reserve the right to be massively offended if you blaspheme against one of these core principles.

If you are unhappy with how you set your system up: # dpkg-reconfigure -p low dash Neat unix trivia article but don't blaspheme Debian...

It simply should be illegal for Google to down an app because it contains legal words that blaspheme against Google's California values.

As a modern society we would like to assume that human sacrifice doesn't happen but just try to blaspheme a nation state and see how quickly people get ready with the pitch forks.

It would also open the door to trolling in real life like the aforementioned 'bible cake' or even, for instance, going into an Islamic owned shop and forcing them to blaspheme.

Is it really accidental when characters blaspheme, or invoke religious imagery?

I will defend your right to blaspheme of courseOnce again, I think that your argument here that free speech is the only way to raise consciousness is an interesting one with significant merit, but the subsequent straw man really derails it.

I will defend your right to blaspheme of course, but reserve my right to sneer at your "dialectic" and at your deeply broken toxic simile about how "words and speech are exceedingly used like weapons".s/like/in lieu/, and we should be damn grateful for it.

You imply that the GP is "blaspheme[ing]" free speech, but GP does no such thing.> I will defend your right to blaspheme of course, but reserve my right to sneer at your "dialectic" and at your deeply broken toxic simile about how "words and speech are exceedingly used like weapons".This bit doesn't really add much.

Blaspheme definitions

verb

utter obscenities or profanities; "The drunken men were cursing loudly in the street"

See also: curse cuss swear imprecate

verb

speak of in an irreverent or impious manner; "blaspheme God"