Imprecation in a sentence as a noun

His imprecations are not what make Linux work.

I should have gone about with an imprecation on my lips, I should have worn a face three yards long.

The only way to win it is to avoid it, or to start throwing imprecations around.

He will be trailed, of course, by the philosopher furiously hurling philosophical imprecations: "What do you mean, you're willing to be irrational?

I see middle-aged mothers posting horrific violent imprecations and "find out where that person lives" in response to news articles about some outrage or another.

Imprecation definitions

noun

the act of calling down a curse that invokes evil (and usually serves as an insult); "he suffered the imprecations of the mob"

See also: malediction

noun

a slanderous accusation