How To Use Blight In A Sentence

  • Airport noise and pollution blight many lives. The Sun
  • The apple trees were blighted by frost.
  • Almost all areas are blighted by misbehaving youths at night. Times, Sunday Times
  • The word blighting here, noted as unsuitable by Rossetti, is cancelled in the Bodleian manuscript (Locock). The Complete Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • All over Europe, the fringes of suburbia are blighted by the dreary apparatus of industry - undecorated sheds and dour offices in glum lots girdled by sterile acres of parking.
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  • There is only so long you can ignore that kind of behaviour, even knowing that the little blighter has a bowl filled to the brim with tasty kitty treats in the kitchen.
  • Political bias - raw and wicked - blights American newspapers and TV news.
  • Twitter in an attempt to exert discipline at the end of a year that has been blighted by rebellion within the side and allegations of match-fixing. Times, Sunday Times
  • The most common diseases are verticillium wilt and phomopsis blight.
  • She was blighted by respiratory illness and memory blanks. Times, Sunday Times
  • During the summertime, ozone blights much of the metroplex.
  • Plainfield faces court challenge on 'blighting' fo ... Archive 2007-12-01
  • This attractive, glossy red apple has some resistance to diseases such as apple scab, cedar apple rust, and fire blight.
  • She was blighted by respiratory illness and memory blanks. Times, Sunday Times
  • If the wind is blowing in from the east then sea fret hits even when the rest of old Blighty is basking in conditions more akin to the Mediterranean.
  • The most likely cause is a fungus called petal blight. The Sun
  • The Fishwife herself, who gave me the young plants, says that her own crop failed – the tomatoes caught blight from the potatoes in her allotment and had to be ripped up and thrown away. Archive 2009-09-01
  • In Trainspotting, Begbie's blood boils at the backpackers who see the sights of the city centre but are blind to the blighted landscape of its surrounding schemes.
  • Scratch beneath its surface and Croydon has much more to offer than urban blight and the odd supermodel. Times, Sunday Times
  • The setting becomes an urban blight.
  • The more vigorous growth also provides a better defence against blight disease and fruits especially have proved to have a higher resistance. The Sun
  • Common onion diseases include damping off, botrytis leaf blight, downy mildew, and bacterial blight.
  • The apple crop was wiped out by blight.
  • The canola crop, is blighted; there is a physical presence.
  • The remainder is blighted by alternating self-flagellation, self-justification and unwarranted extrapolation.
  • Organic gardeners can use fixed copper fungicides, but they are not considered as effective against late blight as chlorothalonil. Post-gazette.com - News
  • I can get as caught up as anyone in this country 's failings and all the little injustices that blight our lives. The Sun
  • The stable food, the potato rotted from the land as the first strains of malignant blight struck, and there was nothing left to eat.
  • Some wheat seed treatments that can be used to prevent common bunt, stinking smut and seedling blight.
  • Urban blight and flight is transformed into bustle, bounty, and bidding wars.
  • Its use in controlling bacterial infections such as apple and pear fire blight was also mentioned. Times, Sunday Times
  • Not only is it blighted by foul conditions but it also bears no relation to the original concept of a May Day celebration. Times, Sunday Times
  • A brain drain blighted the Labour governments of the 1970s, as high earners were driven abroad by penal income-tax rates.
  • Every perception enters an imaginal file, buds in arrest until swayed by a life-shifting rain or the blight of the news of an unknown person's death.
  • Should they be blighted for life, and have their employment prospects limited? Times, Sunday Times
  • Note that blight is not restricted to stagnant or declining regions and cities.
  • Only Clive and Kenna talked racily, but in jerks, of cattle, fruit-blight, mules, and white ants. Blue Aloes Stories of South Africa
  • March 5th, 2010 at 1: 05 pm bitblt says: buttblight keeps whining about being stoned for purity sins, but heyzeus was very clear in john 8 that behaving with the “judgment” against others and stoning was in itself was just as evil. Think Progress » Missouri lawmaker: Allowing gays to serve openly increases a military’s casualty rate.
  • The introduction of the new type of development plan under the 1968 Act involved revised provisions in relation to planning blight.
  • Lucky you if you managed to escape Blighty and the weekend's torrential downpours. Times, Sunday Times
  • I agree that tagging is visual blight, and to answer richjensen's point in my experience most of the paint-outs I see are private property owners or neighborhood volunteer groups. An Alternative Approach to the Graffiti “Problem” « PubliCola
  • But now the hoodoo that has blighted City all season has hit again.
  • Victims often have their lives blighted for good by physical and mental injuries. The Sun
  • Or seated opposite the neighbour whose leylandii have blighted your rhododendrons for years. Times, Sunday Times
  • The grain-withering fungus called fusarium head blight has cost state farmers billions of dollars in past years. Undefined
  • studentification" is blighting some urban areas, with an increase in antisocial behaviour, noise and litter. The Guardian World News
  • The introduction of the new type of development plan under the 1968 Act involved revised provisions in relation to planning blight.
  • As I sat nursing these reflections, the casement behind me was banged on to the floor by a blow from the latter individual, and his black countenance looked blightingly through. Wuthering Heights
  • Corn seed is generally treated with fungicides to prevent seed decays and seedling blights.
  • Charges imposed by councils to dispose of waste are contributing to an increase in fly-tipping that is blighting many areas, a survey suggests. Times, Sunday Times
  • That issue, of course, is ‘yard signs’ - that biggest waster of volunteer time, that blight on the environment, that piece of poster board stapled on a stick.
  • An embarrassing blunder nearly blighted his career before it got off the ground.
  • He has seen first hand the tragedy of lives blighted by unemployment. The Sun
  • wind is important in spreading diseases: for example bacterial blight is spread in wet, windy weather.
  • After a difficult two months, blighted by injuries to her back and thigh, the tall Californian has looked tetchy and out of sorts this week.
  • The old, washed-out white tents began to dot the promenade like the annoying blight on my ixora plants.
  • Nobody knows why some people should be affected by facial blushing so severe that it blights their lives.
  • But late blight attacks quickly and is capable of defoliating a field within a matter of weeks.
  • The two trees with the smoky trunks were blighted high up, and the withered branches domineered above the leaves, Through the whole building white had turned yellow, yellow nearly black; and since the time when the poor lady died, it had slowly become a dark gap in the long monotonous street. Dombey and Son
  • The residents are quite rightly convinced it will blight the area and lead to increased crime and a downward spiral of house prices.
  • The major soybean diseases can be classified as root rots, stem rots, leaf blights, and seed diseases.
  • Bolt brings light as dope scandal blights Jamaican athletics funds outplod the hares * Best equity income funds easily beat S&P 500 over decade * WN.com - Business News
  • What is it with British trains and urban blight? Times, Sunday Times
  • This is a big advantage in a typical summer, as it will be less prone to blight. Times, Sunday Times
  • Other problems that could be bothersome include mildew, leaf spot, and bacterial blight.
  • The next day, they moved a couple of hundred yards downriver to a blighted spit of land below the Burlington Northern bridge.
  • A stake, trellis, or cage keeps fruits and foliage off the soil and allows air to circulate around the plants, reducing the likelihood of foliage blights.
  • So, it was with some trepidation that I offered to expose myself to a department of the snotty-nosed blighters little darlings, even with pay.
  • She is 22 but her voice is more blighted bud than rose, an emotional instrument that conveys innocence broken on the wheel of restless craving.
  • Swindon Council has set aside roughly £50,000 this year to tackle the blight of graffiti on roads signs, bus shelters and subways across the borough.
  • She refers to Aviemore as a diseased blight whose continuing existence diminishes Scotland.
  • However, South Africa sees mercenaries as one of the blights on Africa.
  • Her life was blighted by an unhappy marriage.
  • Moreover, sometimes an area becomes blighted almost overnight, so that what was a desirable home becomes unsaleable and again the price plummets.
  • Further afield, where planes are still incredibly loud, it is impossible to ascertain the extent to which properties will suffer from noise blight. Times, Sunday Times
  • So far Minnamook seemed to be safe from the development blight. MURDER SONG
  • Convocation preferred the blight of the coward Science to the cultivation of all that was beautiful, distinguished, humane, and brave; and they reaped as they had sown, they kept the dog smotherer and lost the radiant spirit and uplifting eloquence of the inspired seer. Great Testimony against scientific cruelty
  • The Open can be blessed or blighted by meteorological conditions. Times, Sunday Times
  • A player of mercurial brilliance, his career has been blighted by injury. Times, Sunday Times
  • The people who are dumping waste on the roadsides are blighting the countryside and destroying the good image that the vast majority of people try to promote.
  • Cercis chinensis leaf blight disease is a new disease that infects and causes harm to Cercis chinensis, about which there are no researches internationally thus far.
  • DAVID W. BLIGHT is the director of Yale University's Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition and a professor of American history.
  • The rest is superficial, a blight of the modern obsession with looks and image.
  • June 8, 2009 at 3: 09 pm hullo Denny – wanted to know, beyond winning the blighty brolly, is there a legit way to get one? UKTV’s Blighty and British Designer Ted Baker Join Forces « Art & Business of Motion
  • After another blast of the wretched conditions that have blighted this season's major championships, a motley crew of contenders have lined up at Hazeltine to exploit the uncertainty.
  • More than that, it has the potential to transform what has become a blighted city. Times, Sunday Times
  • It's good practice in the country to be generous with bird food once Winter bites; do it too early, though and the little blighters will forsake their job of keeping the bugs down.
  • In 1953 in Yugoslavia I observed vigorous young durmast oak (_Quercus petraea_) being killed by the blight. Northern Nut Growers Association Report of the Proceedings at the 44th Annual Meeting Rochester, N.Y. August 31 and September 1, 1953
  • While he is alive, the shadow that has blighted my life will still be there. The Sun
  • Civilisation made affluent women sick, while poverty and sin blighted the parturient poor.
  • Fig. 5. Symptom of stem blight of horse-tail45 days after inoculated with infested soil of Fusarium oxysporum. Left: uninoculated, right: inoculated.
  • As with other small fruits, Botrytis primarily affects ripening fruit, although under certain circumstances the fungus can cause stem blight as well.
  • Britain has suffered from ambition blight, compounded by a planning blight. Times, Sunday Times
  • The city had larded the blighted 16-acre site with subsidies, but no developer wanted to take on risk of such magnitude in a borough that hadn't seen a new office tower in a quarter-century.
  • Even then, local governments didn't have carte blanche; they had to justify the taking as a way to mitigate ‘urban blight.’
  • His death cast a blight on the whole of that year.
  • Here's what she should do: every time one of the little blighters starts acting up, simply threaten to show them one of Guy Ritchie's movies.
  • Entire ferns may be blighted by late summer in a wet year.
  • She peered at him, complacent, curious, blightingly unconscious of his emotions, and the young man felt a stirring of hot impatience. The Love Affairs of Pixie
  • Their father said if they ever tasted this insipid foreign stuff instead of merely reading about it in those blighted Blyton books, they would realize how amazing was their mother's curry-rice and khichri-saas and pumpkin buryani and dhansak. Archive 2006-06-01
  • 'profligate,' 'brutal,' 'godless,' 'blighting' -- does not each involve research, investigation, comparison, analysis, deliberation, a heavy tax upon the intellectual resources of the church if any result worth having is to be obtained? Preaching and Paganism
  • The law may soon come to the aid of householders who claim their lives are blighted by neighbours' high hedges.
  • Therefore, a combination of an effective smut fungicide plus a fungicide effective against seedling blights is recommended.
  • The blighter stole my purse!
  • According to the rare reports that emerge from inside, the crumbling cities and towns are blighted by poverty and despair. The Sun
  • blighted urban districts
  • That stadium was blighted by cost overruns and delays. Times, Sunday Times
  • Meantime, the young man's life is blighted, his name dishonoured, his family plunged into unspeakable grief. Corporal Cameron of the North West Mounted Police; a tale of the Macleod trail
  • The chestnut blight fungus and a bacterial disease menace chestnut and oak. Times, Sunday Times
  • Residents of a street blighted by a stream of juggernauts have given a slightly disbelieving welcome to Swindon Council's decision to close the road to through traffic.
  • Not much cop considering that the game requires a hefty one hundred of the little blighters to be meandering about at once!
  • The Glenpark side are one of several teams whose campaign has thus far been blighted by a total washout.
  • Or will it trigger a stagflationary wage-price spiral, the likes of which blighted the 1970s? Slippery Slope for EU After Oil Shock
  • That stadium was blighted by cost overruns and delays. Times, Sunday Times
  • There's David Childs, whom Filler credits with having created ‘some of the worst blights on the city's skyline in recent decades’.
  • This is a big advantage in a typical summer, as it will be less prone to blight. Times, Sunday Times
  • He got off the bus, no turning back, no thunderbolt to blight him to a cinder simply by hoping for it. THE OPEN DOOR
  • We're beggars and blighters and ne'er-do-well cads.
  • Every now and then some would-be curmudgeon rises up on his hind legs and yowls at the sky that the latest form of social networking is a blight on the cultural landscape and proves that people have nothing better to do than post pictures of their pets in various shocking forms of dishabille. MIND MELD: How Does Blogging and Social Networking Affect the Publishing Industry?
  • Our crezy economy: people get foreclosed and move into rental housing, and meanwhile they properties they vacate remain vacant and lead to neighborhood blight and depressed property values for their neighbors, who are therefore encouraged to default as well because they have negative equity. Matthew Yglesias » By Request: The Foreclosure People
  • Three of the blighters appeared in the past week, and the similarity of the respective plots was striking.
  • He put the potato blight in the foreground; for, with the instinct of the caddice worm, he felt that this was the piece of bulrush by which he could best float his The History of the Great Irish Famine of 1847 (3rd ed.) (1902) With Notices of Earlier Irish Famines
  • While he is alive, the shadow that has blighted my life will still be there. The Sun
  • Trees appear to resist bacterial canker but are very susceptible to fire blight.
  • Their recent lethargy and incompetence have blighted the international game. Times, Sunday Times
  • I can get as caught up as anyone in this country 's failings and all the little injustices that blight our lives. The Sun
  • The spray-painted art was considered an urban blight by New York officials, who persecuted the young artists who created it.
  • It was a very great blight on American history, but in the end the trials made a big difference. Times, Sunday Times
  • Pod and stem blight and Phomopsis seed rot occur throughout Ohio, but are more prevalent in the southern and western regions of the state.
  • The Harlem of 1921 was already an urban blight, although only a few years separated these once fine homes from the mansions and townhouses of upper crust New York in those days.
  • She rarely strays down the path of ponderous self-importance that often blights this genre.
  • To jolly things up Blighty made the joke about it being a shame more of the voters weren't undead, then Howard might have a chance.
  • The sense that historical fiction had sunk to the condition of adventure stories for boys, and romance for the millions, cast a blight on the genre in the 20th cent.
  • After forty-five years of the playless life of a serf to blighting seriousness, the wonder is that sourness had not entered to hopelessly curdle all chances for joyous living. Our Nervous Friends — Illustrating the Mastery of Nervousness
  • Pathogens of carrot spotted blight were able to overwinter in seeds, plant residues and soils, but cann't be isolated from fermented manures.
  • Forty years ago this summer, with the map of the Empire all but rolled up, the last British national servicemen returned to Blighty and swapped their battledress for demob suits.
  • I've just watched the clips here in Blighty and i am happy to say that it looks pretty good on the strength of them. UPDATED: Three clips from BBC's DAY OF THE TRIFFIDS mini-series
  • Head scab, formally known as fusarium head blight, develops when conditions are wet during a key stage of crop development called flowering, which occurs at different times in the spring depending on location. Wet Weather Threatens U.S. Winter Wheat Crop
  • For those of us already blighted by insomnia, a supermoon really isn't that super. Times, Sunday Times
  • Scratch beneath its surface and Croydon has much more to offer than urban blight and the odd supermodel. Times, Sunday Times
  • Forty years ago this summer, with the map of the Empire all but rolled up, the last British national servicemen returned to Blighty and swapped their battledress for demob suits.
  • It is often grown in areas where tomato blight is a problem. The Sun
  • I watched until their pickups were a red blight on the landscape and then gone. No Mercy
  • However, the figures are still dwarfed by the huge scale of the problem of urban dereliction and blight in the area.
  • Although I'm not sure it'll be quite so delicious back in chilly old Blighty.
  • First, the prolific ascospore stage is very important in causing the spread of the blight, the spores at this stage being forcibly ejected from the pustules and borne through the air for some distance. Northern Nut Growers Association, Report of the Proceedings at the Third Annual Meeting Lancaster, Pennsylvania, December 18 and 19, 1912
  • The resulting monocultured crops are genetically limited and far more susceptible to insects, blights, diseases, and bad weather than are diverse crops.
  • Ocala City Council also stressed getting rid of blight and developing a long-term annexation plan News | OS | http://www.ocala.com
  • In 1973 the Land Compensation Act gave statutory effect to these, and made other significant changes to the planning blight provisions.
  • It is a street in an expanding urban area which had been blighted by heavy wagons transporting materials and finished products for a large and noisy industrial operation.
  • We told you last week about a newly completed genetic map of the organism that causes late blight.
  • You can't pretend the wheat doesn't have head blight, a cow doesn't have blackleg, or that predators don't prey.
  • Poor blighters, it'll be over before they know it.
  • The blight is actually a fungus called rhytisma acerinum and has infected trees all the way from Ottawa to Barrie to Windsor in the past several years.
  • Scratch beneath its surface and Croydon has much more to offer than urban blight and the odd supermodel. Times, Sunday Times
  • The blight also infected chinquapins (also of the genus Castanea), and some species of oak, especially post oak, Quercus Stella.
  • Where is the nest of song-sparrow, or Maryland yellow-throat, or yellow warbler, or chippy, that is safe from the curse of the cow-bird's blighting visit? My Studio Neighbors
  • France might, for example, have continued with the revanchist attitude to Germany which blighted the continent in the inter-war period.
  • The woman's face is set in impotent hate, the man's mouth is wried with cursing; and the faces are not young, nor the graven bitterness a mere passing blight. The Joys of Being a Woman and Other Papers
  • I had to cast my mind back 30 years to the incident that blighted my life. The Sun
  • This project combines fire rehabilitation with watershed and ecosystem restoration on sites where loblolly pine has been ravaged by bugs and blight.
  • We have lost too many champions to Dutch elm disease, chestnut blight, and oak wilt.
  • Still scrounging for food and blighted by diseases like kala-azar and tuberculosis, many live as bonded labourers, and face acute food shortage and starvation every year.
  • His unscientific screed is an academic embarrassment and blight on the reputation of this university. Wayne Besen: Dangerous New Anti-Gay Sham Study Debunked
  • They are a blight on many city centres and disfigure urban life to an intolerable degree.
  • Alcohol abuse and alcoholism have blighted generations and all social classes, regardless of gender. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rice prices are soaring because drought has blighted the Basmati crop.
  • The Open can be blessed or blighted by meteorological conditions. Times, Sunday Times
  • The City Council even passed a resolution declaring that there was no blight in Oakland.
  • Abstract: The bacterial stem blight is one of the important diseases on broad bean.
  • Nor are the blight years which affected potato crops in about one year in three, in the not so distant past.
  • The chinkapins and the alder-leaved chestnuts on this side hill have been so blight resistant as to require almost no attention, and for that reason I am making hybrids between the chinkapin and the alder-leaved chestnut and the Chinese chestnut in the hope of making an excellent combination of chinkapin quality and Chinese size. Northern Nut Growers Association, report of the proceedings at the eighth annual meeting Stamford, Connecticut, September 5 and 6, 1917
  • Many ecologists blamed the usual suspects for the bird losses: DDT, defoliants, avian malaria, suburban blight.
  • He grew up under the old Communist system, in a blighted Czechoslovakia whose ambitions for independence had been crushed beneath Soviet tank tracks.
  • I. AM is having trouble understanding the lingo here in Blighty. The Sun
  • Breaden and Godfrey were suffering agonies from "sandy blight," a sort of ophthalmia, which is made almost unbearable by the clouds of flies, the heat, the glare, and the dust. Spinifex and Sand
  • Although I'm not sure it'll be quite so delicious back in chilly old Blighty.
  • By law the program is supposed to help blighted areas that wouldn't attract sufficient economic development "without the benefits of tax increment financing" - that is, areas that won't improve unless the city ponies up to get rid of "dilapidation," vacant buildings, and environmental problems and bolster infrastructure. Chicago Reader
  • Almost all areas are blighted by misbehaving youths at night. Times, Sunday Times
  • The dawn chorus starts shortly before 4 a.m. now, and I find it impossible to sleep on once the noisy little blighters have roused me.
  • Common onion diseases include damping off, botrytis leaf blight, downy mildew, and bacterial blight.
  • Manchester still suffers from urban blight and unacceptable poverty.
  • For the dads, our highlight had to be the girls' excitement at being abroad and being with us; our lowest ebb was realising that the little blighters had discovered how to lock the minibar.
  • radio, afraid that she might accidently come upon that ranting, hysterical voice which had blighted their lives. DREAMS OF INNOCENCE
  • The images I speak of as matter for more evocation that I can spare them were the fruit of two different periods at Boulogne, a shorter and a longer; this second appearing to us all, at the time, I gather, too endlessly and blightingly prolonged: so sharply, before it was over, did I at any rate come to yearn for the Rue Montaigne again, the Rue Montaigne "sublet" for a term under a flurry produced in my parents 'breasts by a A Small Boy and Others
  • I can imagine picking up a nest of birdlings to raise in hopes of their survival from the devastation and blight that is being wreaked upon their surroundings.
  • The other old man, whose clothes were equally squalid, sat more upright, and seemed livelier, and of a lighter heart, misfortune not having yet touched so blightingly the natural volatility of his disposition; for, now and then, he spoke in low tones to his companion, who sometimes smiled, but rarely made answer. A Yacht Voyage to Norway, Denmark, and Sweden 2nd edition
  • Here we speak to families who have been blighted by the disease - and come back fighting. The Sun
  • So back in Blighty, Lord W is on his uppers with a wife and six racehorses to support, and needs to liquidise some assets. Boiling a Frog
  • What is it with British trains and urban blight? Times, Sunday Times
  • A man in Co. Limerick found that blight could be controlled by an application of bluestone and lime, or bluestone and washing soda.
  • Brick Bradford @y40 - Hamburger buns aren't the only things they call 'baps' in Old Blighty. Blogtimore, Hon
  • And a resident who fears his life will be blighted by the development says he has been let down by a faint-hearted planning committee.
  • The pansies and polyanthus we've already planted seem to be tough little blighters, not much at risk.
  • He has seen first hand the tragedy of lives blighted by unemployment. The Sun
  • On the Pacific Coast a bacterial blight occurs in some sections on corylus. Northern Nut Growers Association Report of the Proceedings at the Fourteenth Annual Meeting Washington D.C. September 26, 27 and 28 1923
  • Even before the tourists jetted out from Blighty former Australian bowling demon Dennis Lillee delivered a withering a verdict on the England attack.
  • But the families of the pilots, and many aviation experts, have long argued that the ruling represented an unjust blight on two fine careers. Times, Sunday Times
  • The main British story when I first arrived in the States was the food crisis, the line being that Americans visiting Blighty risked being killed stone dead by noxious odours, or drowned in the tears of apple-cheeked farmers' wives.
  • Then in 1845 the harvest was wrecked by bad weather, and the first blights hit the Irish potato crop.

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