How To Use Uncongenial In A Sentence

  • Robert only learns of Edna's new abode yesterday from his mother and claims to have returned because the Mexicans were uncongenial.
  • I am wondering how much research fiction as a category is designed to appeal to the creative writing student for whom the institutional settings and protocols are uncongenial?
  • Further, the style of Siloti's artistic life was utterly uncongenial to the post-1914 era and especially the American world.
  • The religious climate at the time was uncongenial to new ideas.
  • Frankly, we are concerned about your performing the Twist, in an era uncongenial to it, and how it might aggravate your sciatica. Dear Chairman Bernanke
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  • Indeed, economists have good reason to find the theory of punctuated equilibrium uncongenial.
  • Grenville found the post uncongenial and his successes were few.
  • A sensitive session that might be uncongenial for resolving delicate domestic dilemmas.
  • the task was uncongenial to one sensitive to rebuffs
  • Merely holding an uncongenial opinion one that would be considered radically unrestrictive in most of the developed world makes on a “traitor”, “defector”, and “5th-columnist”. Friendly Fire: Gun Nuts Go Full-Auto on One of Their Own « Lean Left
  • Some of those arguments seem insane to people who find them uncongenial. Rally to Restore Authority
  • There is not much artistic possibility to be found in caring for a sick friend, enduring an unhappy marriage, performing uncongenial work.
  • Trilling's, which revolutionized our understanding of this recalcitrant work, brings the history of nineteenth-century ideas about duty, sincerity and much else to bear on the novel's uncongenial insistence on "fixity" of identity and conduct. Powell's Books: Overview
  • Despite the uncongenial tone of her voice, however, a slow flush had caught her cheeks unawares.
  • A question that simple has the potential for being haunting; and indeed, it has recurred to me periodically since, whenever I have come up against an uncongenial, even repellant text.
  • The stadium is an unsightly, uncomfortable, and uncongenial place to watch or (so players say) play baseball; it was designed primarily with football in mind.
  • By contrast with her violent and uncongenial relationship with her first husband, Sir Percival Glyde, Laura appears to share all her second husband's aims, interests, and concerns.
  • They were wrapped in an uncongenial and frosty imperviousness. THE PRODIGAL FATHER
  • He continued to find the Simpsons uncongenial bores.
  • Issues of pluralism, of unity and diversity, are not confined to times when the church finds itself in an uncongenial culture, yet they take on a distinctive cast in such times.
  • We have had very uncongenial weather lately for aeirial music, but I beg you to remember, Sir, that if by your change of abode the Harp in dimensions becomes wrong, you are at liberty to change it at a future time, if undeface'd. Letter 218
  • The situation is not helped by the uncongenial interiors of public toilets and, of course, their widespread closure throughout Scotland.
  • I don't trust myself to gauge the plausibility of this idea because I find it so thoroughly uncongenial.
  • Those who leave the delinquent group, as with those who leave any kind of group, do so because they find the group uncongenial; those who remain do so because the group remains intrinsically rewarding to them.
  • This may appeal to those raised with answers they found uncongenial.
  • This is because pilots are now locked into the flight cabin, or whatever they call it, and are unable to avoid each other's company if they find it uncongenial, by socialising with the passengers.
  • Although I find much of Steiner rather absurd, his ‘cultural conservatism’ is not uncongenial.
  • Well, seeing as I seem to be at my rudest and my uncongenial when around you, I certainly hope not.
  • Many were made, and are still being made, inconvenient, uncongenial and expensive.
  • Sooner or later, Kant warns, there will be no empty space left for those of us who have found the already populated places too cramped or too uncongenial for comfort.
  • Unfortunately I found Christian Aysgarth almost as uncongenial as his sister Primrose. ABSOLUTE TRUTHS
  • He found his first job - as a bank clerk - uncongenial, and the armed services always beckoned.
  • My lifelong entanglement with pay phones dates me; when I was young they were just there, a given, often as stubborn and uncongenial as the curbstone underfoot.
  • an uncongenial soil
  • She liked Hogg and loved Leigh Hunt, but Peacock was uncongenial to her. Biography in the DNB
  • He was seen as an effective leader, despite being taciturn and uncongenial.
  • He had emerged, married an uncongenial and rather vulgar Swiss girl, and obtained a professorship at Cooper's Hill.
  • The social upheavals and conflicts, the end of tsarist-style deference, and in particular the flow of peasants into the towns had meant that in public people were uncongenial and at home led narrow lives.
  • This mechanical and repetitive work was certainly uncongenial, but so in a different way was the company that Dickens was obliged to keep.
  • Parliamentary secretaries (unless they are called Adonis) exist to sign letters, reply to debates at uncongenial hours, and read briefs approved by their elders if not betters.
  • The effect of this looseness in the laws is to encourage hasty, incon - siderate marriages, and to make escape from an uncongenial partner so easy that the obligation to cultivate forbearance, and to acquire mutual adaptation, which may not at first exist, is wholly overlooked. Plain facts for old and young : embracing the natural history and hygiene of organic life.
  • If he could have dictated all the conditions, he would have chosen the evenings when Newland was out; not because the young man was uncongenial to him (the two got on capitally at their club) but because the old anecdotist sometimes felt, on Newland's part, a tendency to weigh his evidence that the ladies of the family never showed. The Age of Innocence
  • After a short and "uncongenial" employment with Hallensteins, Charles became one of New Zealand's foremost literary figures, founding the literary journal Landfall in 1946. Stuff.co.nz - Stuff
  • The fact is that military organizations, for the most part, study what makes them feel comfortable about themselves, not the uncongenial lessons of past conflicts.
  • The caricature of celebrity-friendly religions, of course, is that they are long on consolation and short on anything else, such as uncongenial moral codes or an actual God whose own celebrity, celeb-watching snarks suggest, might occasionally overshadow the star's own. Undefined
  • an uncongenial atmosphere
  • Mary, remitted from beloved friends to an uncongenial stepmother, was doubtless on her part pining for sympathy. Biography in the DNB
  • He found having to think about these issues uncongenial.
  • uncongenial," the "friendly parting before any bitterness creeps in," and the "free to decide our lives in some happier and wiser way," rang false. Sisters
  • the uncongenial roommates were always fighting
  • The religious climate at the time was uncongenial to new ideas.
  • He believed that I had marked artistic talent and that I should not be forced to waste it in uncongenial work. Madeleine: An Autobiography
  • It was a poky, little, shabby-genteel place, where four lines of dingy two-storied brick houses looked out into a small railed-in enclo - sure, where a lawn of weedy grass and a few clumps of faded laurel-bushes made a hard fight against a smoke-laden and uncongenial atmosphere. Sole Music
  • He found the place and the department uncongenial.
  • In a different time, turning to himself, he manages to discover an uncongenial double, another maricone, a banker with whom he shares his name.
  • But, upon the whole, it could not be fairly said that his appearance was unprepossessing; indeed, to the congenial, it would have been doubtless not uncongenial; while to others, it could not fail to be at least curiously interesting, from the warm air of florid cordiality, contrasting itself with one knows not what kind of aguish sallowness of saving discretion lurking behind it. The Confidence-Man
  • Bloggers are not obliged to write about stories that they find uninteresting or uncongenial.
  • If he could have dictated all the conditions, he would have chosen the evenings when Newland was out; not because the young man was uncongenial to him (the two got on capitally at their club) but because the old anecdotist sometimes felt, on Newland’s part, a tendency to weigh his evidence that the ladies of the family never showed. V. Book I
  • That single cell contracts and recoils from the things in its environment uncongenial to its constitution, and the things congenial it draws to itself and absorbs. The Kempton-Wace Letters

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