Villainous in a sentence as an adjective

That seems more villainous than what he's currently up to.

Why are they so quick to describe the villainous tech workers as "young white men"?

Not only is it comically villainous, it's the technical term for waste water from toilets.

Blackwater was a comically villainous name to begin with.

Should Alan Rickman be afraid of punishment for all the villainous lines he's delivered on camera?

Instead, it's about saving "us" from the horrible villainous "them" and forcing the others to do what we want through political and legal means or public bullying.

There's no feasible reason to believe a government official is overtly villainous or foolish enough to say something like "You've had your fun.

It's not distant at all... why is providing a forum for users to make bytes/information available to each other categorically more villainous than showing a little ankle?

Here's a viewpoint that's even more scary than a bunch of villainous lawyers out to take advantage of the poor sheeple: The lawyers, the accountants, the CEO's, even judges and juries are just out working hard, trying the best they can to get along in life.

I continue to hold out this vain hope that Intellectual Ventures is an elaborate satire, an effort by some smart technologists to demonstrate how broken the US patent system is by exploiting it in such a comically villainous fashion.

My interpretation of what he meant was "when the original post under discussion used the phrase Big Foo, the intent was to villianize the topic under discussion by the use of a recognized catch phrase for abusive and villainous scheming, and that moving the phrasing to the more neutral mass produced helped establish an honest baseline for discussion.

Villainous definitions

adjective

extremely wicked; "nefarious schemes"; "a villainous plot"; "a villainous band of thieves"

See also: nefarious