How to Use invidious in a Sentence

invidious

adjective
  • The boss made invidious distinctions between employees.
  • Those invidious assumptions are reflected these days all over TV and in the movies.
    BostonGlobe.com, 22 Oct. 2021
  • The more invidious reason to claim that people are born with certain traits is to avoid having to help people do any better.
    Eugenia Cheng, Wired, 25 Aug. 2020
  • Tech companies are increasingly facing the invidious choice of which side of the divide to be on.
    The Economist, 20 June 2020
  • The statement compared Israel’s border wall to the Berlin Wall and drew indirect but invidious analogies to apartheid, slavery and Nazism.
    Barton Swaim, WSJ, 16 Dec. 2020
  • Of course, comparisons to Davidson’s greatest hits are not just invidious but unfair to Ritchie.
    Los Angeles Times, 10 June 2021
  • Closer to home, the mechanisms of repression are less heavy-handed, but no less invidious in their intent.
    Laura Beers, CNN, 6 May 2022
  • Most Justices in Wygant seemed to consider racial bias to be less invidious in hiring than firing decisions.
    The Editorial Board, WSJ, 17 Aug. 2022
  • Again and again, the metaphor gets invoked by leading politicians, typically as a warning against a hidden, invidious threat.
    Ben Zimmer, WSJ, 21 Aug. 2020
  • And people are pretty good at seeing their own behavior in the best light and pretty bad at seeing an invidious pattern to their assumptions.
    New York Times, 2 July 2019
  • As to what happens next, the Australian government has put itself in an invidious position.
    Tim Soutphommasane and Marc Stears, CNN, 12 Jan. 2022
  • The Wirecard fraud has again brought to public attention the invidious negligence of some auditors.
    Karthik Ramanna, Fortune, 11 July 2020
  • Still others objected to the idea of a list in the first place, noting its intrinsically arbitrary and invidious nature.
    New York Times, 22 June 2018
  • Farewell to the debt collectors, the invidious bureaucrats, the endless frustrations.
    David Grann, The New Yorker, 28 Feb. 2023
  • Mr Trump’s behaviour forced on Congress an invidious choice.
    The Economist, 12 Dec. 2019
  • Doniger’s invidious contrast of the poetic quality of the work between its first and second books is as much a consequence of the text itself as of the poetic prowess of the translators and editors involved.
    Wendy Doniger, The New York Review of Books, 7 Apr. 2022
  • In many respects, Mr Trump has placed military leaders in an invidious position.
    The Economist, 7 June 2020
  • The 14th Amendment requires the freedom of choice to marry not be restricted by invidious racial discriminations.
    Karl R. Bauman, The Seattle Times, 12 June 2017
  • Because there is only one motive—to realize a maximum of benefit at a minimum of cost—those who do not flourish are losers in an invidious, Darwinian sense.
    Marilynne Robinson, The New York Review of Books, 27 May 2020
  • This fusion of racial grievance and post-racialism created a toxic brew, poisonous to the ongoing efforts to contest white supremacy and protective of the invidious status quo that the Voting Rights Act had tried to interrupt.
    Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw, The New Republic, 23 Oct. 2020
  • Even this, however, failed to impress the invidious keepers of independent rock music.
    M.t. Richards, Chicago Tribune, 19 Jan. 2023
  • Even California’s liberal electorate signaled last month that crude and invidious affirmative action should remain a thing of the past.
    Holman W. Jenkins, WSJ, 8 Dec. 2020
  • His writing demystifies the world before us, dispelling the cloud created by the chaotic motivations and invidious narcissism of the market.
    Tiana Reid, Vulture, 31 Aug. 2021
  • Did Congress, in enacting Section 1182(f), authorize the President to deny entry to a class of aliens on the basis of invidious discrimination?
    Garrett Epps, The Atlantic, 28 May 2017
  • Laid bare, this executive order is no more than what the President promised before and after his election: naked invidious discrimination against Muslims.
    Robert Barnes, Washington Post, 28 May 2017
  • My study suggests chilling effects, due to online surveillance and other legal/regulatory threats, put all of these freedoms at risk in subtle and invidious ways while affecting certain people or groups more than others.
    Jonathon W. Penney, Slate Magazine, 7 July 2017
  • Monday’s ruling won’t open the floodgates to invidious discrimination as critics imagine.
    Ryan T. Anderson, WSJ, 6 June 2018
  • When Britain’s death toll from the virus first surpassed those of other European countries in May, Johnson argued that country-to-country comparisons were invidious because governments collect and analyze data differently.
    BostonGlobe.com, 31 July 2020
  • Considering painters and sculptors in groups generates invidious hierarchies—most innovative, most original—that can relegate accomplished but less than dazzling artists to the sidelines.
    Karen Wilkin, WSJ, 3 Apr. 2018
  • Infidels are by definition misguided and prone to ignorant, invidious ideas.
    Reuel Marc Gerecht, WSJ, 25 Aug. 2022

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'invidious.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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