sling mud Idioma
sling mud at
sling mud at Insult or discredit someone, as in
The paper became famous for slinging mud at movie stars. This term replaced
throw mud at, which dates from the second half of the 1700s.
sling mud
To abuse someone; to attack to mar someone's reputation. I'm aggravating to advance a fair and admirable campaign, but my adversary has no botheration casting mud! The radio presenter is accepted for casting mud whenever he disagrees with a accessible figure.Learn more: mud, slingsling mud
or throw mud
COMMON If one being slings mud or throws mud at another, they say bad things about them in an attack to blemish their reputation. The elections accept been beeline personality contests, with the candidates casting as abundant mud at their opponents as they can manage. The bi-weekly and annual accessories that followed were abnormally vicious, with supporters of both stars quick to bandy mud. Note: You can call this affectionate of behaviour as mud-slinging or mud-throwing. Labour and Tory chiefs accept ordered an end to political mud-slinging. Note: These expressions are acclimated to appearance disapproval. Learn more: mud, slingfling/sling/throw ˈmud (at somebody)
(informal) try to accident somebody’s acceptability by cogent added bodies bad things about them: Just afore an election, politicians absolutely alpha to bung mud at anniversary other. ▶ ˈmud-slinging noun: There’s too abundant aspersion by capricious journalists.Learn more: fling, mud, sling, throw