disgracefully

[ UK /dɪsɡɹˈe‍ɪsfəli/ ]
ADVERB
  1. in a dishonorable manner or to a dishonorable degree
    his grades were disgracefully low
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How To Use disgracefully In A Sentence

  • In recent years a number of politicians have behaved disgracefully and then compounded their offences by trying to evade responsibility. Times, Sunday Times
  • Indeed, comparing him to Benedict Arnold is instructive: both gifted men were at times disgracefully ill-used.
  • In a word, I may say that he who does not estimate the base and evil, the good and noble, according to the standard of the legislator, and abstain in every possible way from the one and practise the other to the utmost of his power, does not know that in all these respects he is most foully and disgracefully abusing his soul, which is the divinest part of man; for no one, as Laws
  • To suggest otherwise implies, disgracefully, that victims are somehow complicit in the violence against them. Times, Sunday Times
  • When one player behaves disgracefully, it reflects on the whole team.
  • The athletic spring that had once been in my step had slid disgracefully into a slothful waddle and I was metamorphosing into a thirty-something marshmallow instead.
  • In recent years a number of politicians have behaved disgracefully and then compounded their offences by trying to evade responsibility. Times, Sunday Times
  • In recent years a number of politicians have behaved disgracefully and then compounded their offences by trying to evade responsibility. Times, Sunday Times
  • She has to deliver her disgracefully overdue copy to Outsider.
  • British prisons remain disgracefully crowded and insanitary.
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