Disapprobation in a sentence as a noun

I'm so sorry, I meant disapprobation, but because I am stupid I wrote the wrong thing.

He was booed on the stage by the audience and maintained his support in the face of disapprobation.

"Prevention of learning" just seems like one of those things that should be considered a crime, but is never punished with even so much as disapprobation.

It isn't clear to me why social disapprobation and pressure on the whole to excise reactionaries is inappropriate in this context.

And if it wasn't the lack of clarity regarding the actual target of the gratuitous swipe deserves at least a modicum of disapprobation.

I guess that the New Yorker doesn't extend the same disapprobation to ending a headline with a preposition as it does to writing "naïve" or "coöperate" without diaeresis.

Peter Thiel doesn't think Einstein was wasting his time, and isn't expressing disapprobation of physics or science; he's expressing disapprobation of modern physics-academia, and the presumption that the thing to do with your genius is obviously string theory.

I'd be much more comfortable interacting professionally with someone like Tso whose point-of-view is rationally presented, whether or not I agree with him, then with people who come across with shrill disapprobation and the intention of blackballing colleagues for their public opinions.

And it creates a very high bar which requires broad active support by the strucurally favored minority to reverse that arrangements, as it requires a Constitutional Amendment, a process in which the disapprobation of citizens of smaller states is even stronger than their disproportionate power in choosing the political branches of the federal government, and thus setting federal legislation.

Disapprobation definitions

noun

an expression of strong disapproval; pronouncing as wrong or morally culpable; "his uncompromising condemnation of racism"

See also: condemnation