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Definitions

malodor

[mal-oh-der] / mælˈoʊ dər /




Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

“The malodor is a potent behavioral message to keep our hands away from our face, which is something we should be doing anyway,” Pamela Dalton of Monell Chemical Senses Center said in the Wirecutter report.

From Fox News • Jul. 15, 2020

People who can’t contain themselves bear only some of the blame for the malodor, experts say: trash, sewage and other sources are generally greater contributors to the stench.

From The Guardian • Sep. 9, 2016

Somehow the prospect of the corpse plant’s malodor is part of its appeal.

From Scientific American • Mar. 21, 2012

Range Resources says that the D.E.P. visited the area on 24 separate occasions and found no malodor.

From New York Times • Nov. 18, 2011

It is a perfect maelstrom of misinformation, the avatar of impudence, the incarnation of infamy—a social cesspool whose malodor spreads contagion like the rank breath of the gila-monster or the shade of a upas tree.

From Brann the Iconoclast — Volume 01 by Brann, William Cowper