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    Synonyms and Definitions

    Use "disgraced" in a sentence

    disgraced example sentences

    disgraced


    1. Dalton told me the story one night, about how her sister Lizzy had disgraced the family name and had been sent off with the culprit, whom she’d, indulged


    2. To see or use a handkerchief in your dream indicates that you will be disgraced or embarrassed in some way


    3. No accusation could have affected more deeply the reputation and fortune of the disgraced party ; and if such an accusation could have been supported, we may be assured that it would have been brought


    4. It is perhaps worth noting, and keeping in the forefront of our memories that the left has currently adopted the same stance as this disgraced senator, with oh so much more vigor


    5. What in the world was this mentally-challenged Secretary of Health and Human Services and her minions in the Clinton Administration thinking of when they disgraced the entire decade of the nineties by coming up with categories such as the male way of knowing (bad), and the female way of knowing (good)? The former was 144


    6. Some disgraced the uniform


    7. She gave Faith to understand that she had disgraced herself and her father beyond redemption and that she, Mary Vance, was done with her


    8. It took courage for our disgraced elders to return to us once we knew what they had done as they could easily have run for safety and never felt the good Gathandrian earth beneath their feet again


    9. of station who, by his lack of responsible action, has disgraced Pharaoh, his family, his


    10. Well, they have disgraced themselves almost as badly as he, when they

    11. Forgotten… abandoned… disgraced


    12. Nobody wanted Hitler’s disgraced Volkswagen, so the factory remained in the city which was now renamed in honour of the adjacent castle, the Wolfsburg


    13. "You have disgraced me


    14. Even though her mother was upset that Jane disgraced the family, she still loved Jane and missed her dearly


    15. that object committed a crime or disgraced himself in any way, but would


    16. The Count was disgraced by her unfaithfulness and refused to honor her with a Countess’ burial


    17. He'd been disgraced and defeated


    18. I have disgraced him and brought shame upon our family, though not nearly as much as I have wrought upon myself


    19. It was a short and sombre debriefing, it was not the death of the disgraced priest that affected them, it was the hellfire demonstration, this chemical mix that Coatl had now introduced into their lives


    20. � Her name is now disgraced in the time we just came from; she lost most of her personal possessions and she has been separated from her new husband and adopted daughter, who are still back in the year 1941

    21. of the disgraced Adonis,


    22. Eisenhower might well have gone down as a defeated and disgraced supreme commander


    23. He was, therefore, stripped of his championship and publicly disgraced on the home viewer when it was announced that he had cheated


    24. waiting for the collapse of faint foundations empire soulnessness disgraced


    25. The oracle was disgraced, and the Dalai Lama’s


    26. It was certainly the first time during his military career that Mohammad Amin’s voice had risen above that of his commander! He shouted in a thunderous tone, ‘If the unbelievers, the enemy, invaded our country and killed and disgraced us, what would you do then? You have another country… each one of you will pack your bags and go back to your own country


    27. He has disgraced me and my family, I


    28. He, a prince of the Church, was rent and distorted by feelings that would have disgraced a curate


    29. Here she was suddenly no longer a disgraced and boycotted and wicked girl, but that strangely encouraging object, that odd restorer of faith in oneself, a Little Sugar Lamb


    30. Yes, evidently Klara knew, she thought, dragging her dusty feet across the kitchen into the passage, and _allmächtiger Gott_ was what one said in Germany when one's disgraced mistress came back, instead of _guten Tag_

    31. And sooner than go back disgraced to Kunitz and fling herself at paternal feet which would in all probability immediately spurn her, Priscilla felt she would die


    32. He had seen what happened to other men's daughters who had disgraced themselves


    33. She kept telling me she wanted to die, that she was disgraced


    34. 22 Absalom never said a word to Amnon, either good or bad; he hated Amnon because he had disgraced his sister Tamar


    35. Disgraced, he returned to Paris, where the infuriated citizenry demanded his


    36. He was such an egotistical intellectual ass he could not bear to lose face socially and be disgraced by being thrown out of the city he wanted to help


    37. If they did not, they were brought back, fined, imprisoned, and disgraced


    38. Of such as these the public verdict will then be: “The man who dies thus rich dies disgraced


    39. It will be but a step for the theologian from the doctrine that he who dies rich dies disgraced, to that which brings upon the man punishment or deprivation hereafter


    40. inhuman, the most vile, and intolerant that ever disgraced the ledger of events

    41. So he went about finding a way out of his dilemma before he was socially disgraced


    42. They can afford multiple and if one is disgraced with pregnancy, he has others he can parade around,” Kyrin explained


    43. So that age is a historical reality, the blackest, the most inhuman, the most vile, and intolerant that ever disgraced the ledger of events


    44. Had We destroyed them with a punishment before him, they would have said, "Our Lord, if only You had sent us a messenger, we would have followed Your revelations before we were humiliated and disgraced


    45. "Sir," answered Don Quixote, "that cannot be on any account omitted, and the knight-errant would be disgraced who acted otherwise: for it is usual and customary in knight-errantry that the knight-errant, who on engaging in any great feat of arms has his lady before him, should turn his eyes towards her softly and lovingly, as though with them entreating her to favour and protect him in the hazardous venture he is about to undertake, and even though no one hear him, he is bound to say certain words between his teeth, commending himself to her with all his heart, and of this we have innumerable instances in the histories


    46. "Have I not told thee," answered Don Quixote, "that I mean to imitate Amadis here, playing the victim of despair, the madman, the maniac, so as at the same time to imitate the valiant Don Roland, when at the fountain he had evidence of the fair Angelica having disgraced herself with Medoro and through grief thereat went mad, and plucked up trees, troubled the waters of the clear springs, slew destroyed flocks, burned down huts, levelled houses, dragged mares after him, and perpetrated a hundred thousand other outrages worthy of everlasting renown and record? And though I have no intention of imitating Roland, or Orlando, or Rotolando (for he went by all these names), step by step in all the mad things he did, said, and thought, I will make a rough copy to the best of my power of all that seems to me most essential; but perhaps I shall content myself with the simple imitation of Amadis, who without giving way to any mischievous madness but merely to tears and sorrow, gained as much fame as the most famous


    47. Jo disgraced herself by nearly fainting away, and had to be doctored by Laurie in the china closet


    48. I felt myself disgraced and deserted forever, but didn't blame him a particle, and was scrambling my papers together, meaning to rush upstairs and shake myself hard, when in he came, as brisk and beaming as if I'd covered myself in glory


    49. "Ah, what a good, plain, lowly lady!" said Teresa when she heard the letter; "that I may be buried with ladies of that sort, and not the gentlewomen we have in this town, that fancy because they are gentlewomen the wind must not touch them, and go to church with as much airs as if they were queens, no less, and seem to think they are disgraced if they look at a farmer's wife! And see here how this good lady, for all she's a duchess, calls me 'friend,' and treats me as if I was her equal--and equal may I see her with the tallest church-tower in La Mancha! And as for the acorns, senor, I'll send her ladyship a peck and such big ones that one might come to see them as a show and a wonder


    50. The Semi-drunk, though beaten, was not disgraced: and he was so affected by the good feeling manifested by the company that he presently produced a sixpence and insisted on paying for another half-pint all round


































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    Synonyms for "disgraced"

    discredited disgraced dishonored shamed

    "disgraced" definitions

    suffering shame