Malediction [noun]
Definition of Malediction:
curse
Sentence/Example of Malediction:
All things that are of the earth, shall return into the earth: so the ungodly shall from malediction to destruction.
And he said to me: I will shew thee what things are to come to pass in the end of the malediction: for the time hath its end.
And she stretched out her broom in an attitude of malediction towards the spot where Pritchard had disappeared.
At the most he would fling out some cryptic hint, bestow some malediction upon life in general.
As Stapylton lay back in his carriage, he could not help muttering a malediction on the "dear friend" he had just parted with.
Then she remembered all that he had done and said;—how he had kissed her, and left a parting malediction for her father.
Nor had she any objection to her butler invoking a nightly malediction on the Pope over his tumbler of whisky-and-water.
He wound up his remark, which was made in a bantering tone, with another malediction, which was earnest enough—savagely so.
These two decrees were the signal for the cry of malediction, raised against me with unexampled fury in every part of Europe.
"Dirty Wendish pigs," they said (which was their favourite malediction, though they themselves were Wend of the Wends).