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SweetFreedom Posted 12 years ago
Grammar

He used his talents for deviousness and vitriol?

Does "deviousness" here mean "being deceitful and underhanded"?

Context:

During the period of these two disputes, Newton had already left Cambridge and academe. He had been active in anti-Catholic politics at Cambridge, and later in Parliament, and was rewarded eventually with the lucrative post of Warden of the Royal Mint. Here he used his talents for deviousness and vitriol in a more socially acceptable way, successfully conducting a major campaign against counterfeiting, even sending several men to their death on the gallows.
  

Top answer

SweetFreedom Does "deviousness" here mean "being deceitful and underhanded"? Yes.

  • SweetFreedom Does "deviousness" here mean "being deceitful and underhanded"?
  • Yes.
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1 Answers
0
SweetFreedomDoes "deviousness" here mean "being deceitful and underhanded"?
Yes.

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