How To Use Pitiable In A Sentence

  • For, following Bruce, led in fact by a string, came an awful apparition -- Juno herself, a pitiable mass of caninity -- looking like the resuscitated corpse of a dog that had been nine days buried, crowded with lumps, and speckled with cuts, going on three legs, and having her head and throat swollen to a size past recognition. Alec Forbes of Howglen
  • If some doctors, motivated by pity, help such pitiable individuals to die, do they commit the offence of destroying life or not?
  • She wrung her hands in pitiable uncertainty; then suddenly seized upon the thought that she was no longer acting in her own interest but in Raymon's; that she was going to him, not in search of happiness, but to make him happy, and that, even though she were to be accursed for all eternity, she would be sufficiently recompensed if she embellished her lover's life. Indiana
  • It's an odd, disturbing, and pitiable pattern of behaviour.
  • The bloodshed there, and in Romeo and Juliet could be called calamitous, but it was not tragically pitiable.
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  • The bloodshed there, and in Romeo and Juliet could be called calamitous, but it was not tragically pitiable.
  • pitiable homeless children
  • Keeley came five minutes later and I got up to hug her, clinging to her in the most pitiable way a heartbroken person could.
  • Shame is a pitiable and clownish condition, most appallingly pitiable and clownish on television.
  • He saw himself as a ludicrous figure, acting as a pennyboy for his aunts, a nervous, well-meaning sentimentalist, orating to vulgarians and idealising his own clownish lusts, the pitiable fatuous fellow he had caught a glimpse of in the mirror. Dubliners
  • The condition of the common people (and belike, in great part, of the middle class also) was yet more pitiable to behold, for that these, for the most part retained by hope [11] or poverty in their houses and abiding in their own quarters, sickened by the thousand daily and being altogether untended and unsuccoured, died well nigh all without recourse. The Decameron of Giovanni Boccaccio
  • He, despite these daughterly attentions, is perceived by the Colonel to be in ‘a condition of pitiable infirmity’.
  • Lamenting her partner's pitiable dancing, one of the female characters pleas for a real dancer, and her call is answered by an immodest Balthasar decked out in what appears to be a flashy 1980s-style suit.
  • Her grandmother seemed to her a pitiable figure.
  • Data reveals that the condition of the small-scale industrial units is more pitiable.
  • The journey is tough as the transportation facility in the region is poor and the roads are in a pitiable condition.
  • What pitiable cant to say, ‘She will live forever in my memory!’
  • Their pitiable disregard—especially among the men—for the finer conventionalities of social life, as well as for the regularities restricting sexual indulgencies, has become a by-word. A Renegade History of the United States
  • Of all the survivors, those who came out of death or labour camps were the most pitiable.
  • The cowardice of those prepared to gossip to journalists but not join 24 others in signing a secret letter is pitiable.
  • He assembled the burgesses of La Rochelle, and laid before them the pitiable condition of the kingdom, the wicked designs of people who were their enemies as well as his own: he called upon them to come and help; he promised to be aidful to them in all their affairs, and, "as a pledge of my good faith," said he, "I will leave you my wife and children, the dearest and most precious jewels I have in this world. A Popular History of France from the Earliest Times, Volume 4
  • It is pertinent to mention the condition of State finances that are in a pitiable condition.
  • pitiable lack of character
  • Howie manages to pull of a tricky acting feat - he's at once judgmental, blustering, self-righteous, and yet somehow pitiable.
  • Bolt, anything but royal, slinking like a beaten alley-cat, in pitiable terror, crawled over to the chair and sat down in it like Chapter 33
  • In either case, the suffering of the person with MPD is equally pitiable and deserving of our understanding, not derision.
  • But his attempt seems to us to disclose a more extraordinary insensibility to the real demands of the case, and to what we cannot help calling the pitiable inadequacy of his own explanation, than we could have conceived possible in so keen and practised a mind. Occasional Papers Selected from the Guardian, the Times, and the Saturday Review, 1846-1890
  • Consider therefore this pitiable Twentieth of June as a futility; no catastrophe, rather a catastasis, or heightening. The French Revolution
  • I want to ask that self is to continue pitiable life seriously.
  • She felt his sympathy-filled eyes soaking into her back, labeling her pitiable. Enchanted Ivy
  • A few imperfect specimens are about, people who make a living out of their pitiable condition.
  • The pitiable condition of animals in zoos has been a matter of great concern to animal welfare activists.
  • "You have done a wonderful job in bringing Vivek's pitiable condition into the limelight.
  • To colonists, idiocy was a pitiable and vulnerable condition, one more manifestation of God's diverse creations.
  • Her people's era on West 107th long since past, Mrs. Weissman had no fondness for the coarse new crowd, and in truth, was a kind of pitiable figure - a yenta who had lost her nosiness.
  • Lucy herself is seen neither as pitiable victim nor heroic coper: she is a liar, self-deceiver and ruthless exploiter of her mother's private wealth but also someone whose recovery hinges on a confrontation with truth. Knot of the Heart – review
  • Her black-velvet hat, with its dejected white plume drooping rakishly over one of her slanting eyes, her imitation-ponyskin coat with its imitation-ermine collar, her cheap black-serge skirt with its undulations half revealing the daintiness of her surprisingly excellent boots -- all struck the watcher anew with their pitiable striving after the prevailing mode in the dress of Occidental women. Undesirables
  • But what is pitiable is the condition of the tree.
  • We dutifully cut out scary things from construction paper and glued together our own artistic efforts, pitiable though they were.
  • So these pathetic people hide their pitiable gutless selves in the cloak of anonymity.
  • The few lives that I had come across were miserable ones, pitiable creatures who had no hope left to live on with.
  • (not without regret for their lightness and comfort), and my soft, grey travelling suit, and, in fact, all my clothing; and proceeded to array myself in the clothes of the other and unimaginable men, who must have been indeed unfortunate to have had to part with such rags for the pitiable sums obtainable from a dealer. THE DESCENT
  • The family of the deceased Avtar Singh is in a very pitiable condition.
  • `If we're going to mumble, does it haves to be so pitiable ? SPLITTING
  • And there is no reason for the perpetration of these crimes, except in the pitiable case of the mendicant journals, at the sanctum door of 'which the wolf of bankruptcy is always growling. EDITORIAL CRIMES – A PROTEST
  • The monks, who had been easy and indulgent landlords, were succeeded by selfish despots who introduced rack-rent for the tenants and brought them to that pitiable state of serfdom in which the nineteenth century—to the eternal shame of Protestant England! The Social Order Before and After the Protestant Reformation
  • Another: The aged masculine is marked down to an even some-more pitiable figure, even by a son who loves him. Philadelphia Reflections: Shakspere Society of Philadelphia
  • For the day came when Mulcachy rapped the chair with his whip-butt, when the attendant through the bars jabbed the iron fork into Ben Bolt's ribs, and when Ben Bolt, anything but royal, slinking like a beaten alley-cat, in pitiable terror, crawled over to the chair and sat down in it like a man. CHAPTER XXXIII
  • Some pitiable excuses were pleaded, and in a great many instances it was said that lack of boots and clothing had compelled self-respecting parents to keep their offspring at home.
  • When these young people return, despite being richer or better educated or both, they still have no pigs, a condition considered pitiable by the older generation.
  • But amassing information for its own sake seemed contemptible to Sontag, or pitiable, and like so many young people who hope to lead the life of the mind, she despised what she considered to be the airlessness and rigidity of academic life. Becoming Susan Sontag
  • The condition of students waiting for their exams is pitiable.
  • The suicide is contemptible, besides being pitiable, when he is hounded out of life despite himself, when he is a little embezzler of a clerk who rushes from the music hall to the Thames and thinks of the unfinished glass with his last breath. The Kempton-Wace Letters
  • If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men the most pitiable.
  • (not without regret for their lightness and comfort), and my soft, gray travelling suit, and, in fact, all my clothing; and proceeded to array myself in the clothes of the other and unimaginable men, who must have been indeed unfortunate to have had to part with such rags for the pitiable sums obtainable from a dealer. The Descent
  • She is "pitiable," guilty of "track-covering, the shame that flickers beneath the arrogance. Point of View in Fiction
  • The opposition of the materialists is absolutely intelligent since it is clear that any man who has spent his life in saying "No" to all extramundane forces is, indeed, in a pitiable position when, after many years, he has to recognise that his whole philosophy is built upon sand and that "Yes" was the answer from the beginning. The Vital Message
  • Othello, though decently acted by Keith David, needs to be of more heroic stature, more purblind nobility, and, eventually, of more pitiable, poetic grandeur than mere competence can summon.
  • It's an accomplished portrayal of ravaged glamour, pitiable but also biliously unlikeable. Times, Sunday Times
  • Their bodies and clothes were in a pitiable condition.
  • If she do not gravitate too irresistibly towards that class of New-Era people (which includes whatsoever we have of prurient, esurient, morbid, flimsy, and in fact pitiable and unprofitable, and is at a sad discount among men of sense), she may get into good tracks of inquiry and connection here, and be very useful to herself and others. The Correspondence of Thomas Carlyle and Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1834-1872, Vol II
  • While denim rules the casual trouser roost, corduroy is not being given the chance to reinvent itself; there is not enough of it on the high street and pitiable attempts to 'commercialise' it (for example, branding cord trousers not as 'cords' but as 'jeans') have not paid off. Men's Flair
  • She gaslights her mother into a pitiable downfall.
  • Her grandmother seemed to her a pitiable figure.
  • He lived to know that the fulsome adulation of the pitiable bishops whom he had consecrated to serve his own ends could not drown one howl of the conscience which he had transformed into a bandog within him. Gathering Clouds: A Tale of the Days of St. Chrysostom
  • I'm sure I make an appropriately pathetic, pitiable picture, sitting here with tears in my eyes, crumbs on my face, in this awful red dress.
  • Austen did say the only thing that renders a single women pitiable is poverty, in Emma, I think. An interview with Helen Fielding by Ashton Applewhite
  • Throw in the cars 'product-placement appearances on "Entourage," "The Sopranos" and "The Real Housewives of New Jersey" and you paint a picture of a brand that is becoming synonymous with a kind of pitiable narcissism, a gum-smacking, Garden State idiocy. A Shapely Visitor From Planet Maserati

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