Pillory in a sentence as a noun

In the past, it has been okay for people to pillory me here.

Im just calling a Party Foul, not trying to pillory your gods.

Who, in the public, wants to pillory Aaron?

What a stupid thing to pillory someone over, with all the problems in the world.

Of course, you are free to pillory him for his petty slight as much as he is as free to maintain his stance.

That, and they don't pillory you with inane commercials before the movie.

We are finally back at the medieval pillory?

I'm not in favour of a wham bam thank you ma'am extradition and media pillory.

Pillory in a sentence as a verb

Most people will not pillory you for pointing out that women are more risk-averse or do things differently.

So public humiliation in the form of an online-pillory is OK?Because that is exactly what this is.

Would Nerny rather she have cancelled it?Is this really enough reason to pillory a former politician over?

Instead of directly addressing them and giving them a chance to explain and apologize, she instead proceeded to put them in a public pillory.

Was it really necessary to pillory the man as a sexist in worldwide media and force him to make a tearful apology on international television?

The burden of this is that even though 99% of the time you'll be fighting malevolent destabilization, you're likely to be in the wrong side of history that 1% of the time, and history will pillory you for it.

And my view is that from developers, I want to hear things about technology and programming, and from entrepreneurs I want to hear about enterprise and innovation, by all means throw in a certain degree of pillory but I just don't want every single damn tweet to be lambasting someone else!Maybe I am going out of my way to rail against him, and maybe that's hypocritical.

Pillory definitions

noun

a wooden instrument of punishment on a post with holes for the wrists and neck; offenders were locked in and so exposed to public scorn

verb

expose to ridicule or public scorn

See also: gibbet

verb

punish by putting in a pillory

verb

criticize harshly or violently; "The press savaged the new President"; "The critics crucified the author for plagiarizing a famous passage"

See also: savage blast crucify