Menacing in a sentence as an adjective

Coming from Oracle, "Hello world" feels oddly menacing.

Hundreds of thousands of babies are born every day. While the whole phenomenon is menacing, one of them by itself is not newsworthy.

Enormous by an individual human scale, but by and large, it doesn't have the same menacing quality as a high pressure oil well being on fire.

The Iranian claims about the aircraft were presented in a serious and menacing fashion.

The controller pulled me aside and said in a menacing Brooklyn accent I didn't know he had in him, "I would appreciate it if you would make this go away.

I have to say, that sounds rather menacing!I think the argument is specifically about how the positions they hold are inconsistent.

Anyone who feels like menacing Turkish society by helping provide unfiltered Internet access could do a lot worse than set up a Lahana[1] node.

And both sides of the aisle have been to blame for this: from the right's talk of activist judges to Obama's physically menacing over the Justices during his state of the union.

It is categorically not meant with menacing intent or as a threat so you can put your Communications/Terrorism legislation down.

Total control in a country of NK's size is actually possible, and with a constant menacing enemy, it was relatively easy to manipulate a small society into subservience.

What an arcane law!Section 66-A deals with messages sent via computer or communication devices which may be grossly offensive, have menacing character, or even cause annoyance or inconvenience.

Whoever created it could only have been thinking of their bureau's unchecked ability to do what it wanted and not the public's perception of it because the creature, especially its eye, looks menacing, ominous, foreboding, malicious, malevolent, and borderline evil.

Often such changes, when reduced to practice, can only be described in vague ways that might be applied in all sorts of surprising ways to future incremental changes and, hence, the monopoly rights tied to such vagaries hang like a menacing cloud over anything that anybody might do in those areas.

Well, there is the mailing list incident where, when someone congratulated another contributor on the birth of their child, Stallman labelled the entire phenomenon of childbirth as "menacing" and went on to say "these birth announcements also spread the myth that having a baby is something to be proud of, which fuels natalist pressure, which leads to pollution, extinction of wildlife, poverty, and ultimately mass starvation.

Menacing definitions

adjective

threatening or foreshadowing evil or tragic developments; "a baleful look"; "forbidding thunderclouds"; "his tone became menacing"; "ominous rumblings of discontent"; "sinister storm clouds"; "a sinister smile"; "his threatening behavior"; "ugly black clouds"; "the situation became ugly"

See also: baleful forbidding minacious minatory ominous sinister threatening