disgruntle

VERB
  1. put into a bad mood or into bad humour
    The employees were disgruntled by their bad working conditions
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How To Use disgruntle In A Sentence

  • Then they would disband the defeated regime's army, turning hundreds of thousands of trained soldiers into disgruntled potential insurgents.
  • There aren't any foreign language soundtracks available on the disc, which could disgruntle some.
  • Fielding the complaints of disgruntled fans is nothing new to Liverpool coach Rafa Benitez.
  • It was the desperate act of a disgruntled former city employee who was refused his old job back.
  • A solitary disgruntled staff officer accompanied Lohengrin back to his hotel, asking him what he did want, receiving no reply. LOHENGRIN
  • The rich do pay their way, you disgruntled old bigot. The Sun
  • O'Mara, a disgruntled bear of a man, contends that the case rests entirely on the credibility of Hearst, which is shaky at best.
  • He says that he became involved only because he had been approached by so many disgruntled investors. Times, Sunday Times
  • British voters were disgruntled but not, it transpired, disengaged. Times, Sunday Times
  • The second instalment, thankfully, managed to appease some disgruntled fans. The Sun
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