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Disgrace in a sentence

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Sentence count:192+11Posted:2016-11-06Updated:2020-07-24
Synonym: discreditdishonorembarrasshumiliateshameAntonym: honorSimilar words: gracegracefulgracefulnessdisguiseracetraceembracedisplaceMeaning: [dɪs'greɪs]  n. a state of dishonor. v. 1. bring shame or dishonor upon 2. reduce in worth or character, usually verbally 3. damage the reputation of. 
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(91) After a few years' disgrace they were back living quietly but comfortably in Moscow.
(92) Bulstrode is preparing to leave Middlemarch, so that disgrace, if it falls, will fall on him among strangers.
(93) It is a disgrace that Government Departments are not subjected to the same scrutiny and punishments.
(93) Sentencedict.com try its best to gather and make good sentences.
(94) If he'd gone back to Zimbala it would have brought disgrace on the family.
(95) In those circumstances, is not Treasury pressure to sell off the spare land on the site a national disgrace?
(96) On seeing them escape, Shovel requested that he be shot with his own pistol, rather than return in disgrace.
(97) They are never forceful enough in condemning bad policing that is a disgrace to the republic and to the rule of law.
(98) Browne was caught using drugs, and was sent home from the private school in disgrace.
(99) And if they twist things still to my disgrace in both counts, what more is there I can do?
(100) These were the days when rock was being shooed out in disgrace, a lumpen confusion of scratched armpits and muddled motives.
(101) Interracial residence and intermarriage are not only a disgrace but also forbidden by law.
(102) Aristodemus went home and found himself ostracized, a national villain until he expiated his disgrace by dying a hero at Plataea.
(103) The letter telling him of his disgrace was delivered to him in prison.
(104) It is a disgrace that we still have hunger in this land of plenty.
(105) The industry carries no reserve on its books for sorrow or suffering or humiliation or disgrace except in money.
(106) Mentally ill people were thought to be a disgrace to the family.
(107) With no real power-base of his own, he was one of the first radicals to suffer disgrace.
(108) It is a disgrace if students are in difficulty on account of administrative failures by local education authorities.
(109) To have once been a criminal is no disgrace. To remain a criminal is the disgrace. Malcolm X 
(110) He told everyone Norm was a hothead, a poor sport, a disgrace as a Catholic, and a lousy catcher.
(111) In the end, Gerald R.. Ford pardoned Nixon after he resigned the presidency in disgrace.
(112) What a disgrace that this is allowed in our city.
(113) While the father was in jail, the whole family suffered his disgrace.
(114) But there is no sign that the disgrace of the last Soviet satrap will clear the way for peace.
(115) On the days when I am left to my own devices I am a bit of a disgrace really.
(116) The scandal over the deal forced the corporation's president to resign in disgrace.
(117) It was the first communication she'd had with her since the day she left the convent ignominiously and in dire disgrace.
(118) After the drama of Pye's water wall, this is all a bitter disappointment and something of a disgrace.
(119) It is a disgrace that politicians here never seem to concern themselves with these problems.
(120) After 13 years, it is an absolute disgrace that no input has been made to tackling unemployment.
More similar words: gracegracefulgracefulnessdisguiseracetraceembracedisplacehuman racedistractface to facepacefaceplacespacesolacepalacerackgrabgrandgrayin placegrimaceat peacesurfacereplacecracktrackdiskdisc
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