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disgrace
noun as in state of shame; bad reputation
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verb as in bring shame upon
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Example Sentences
"This is the personal revenge of the ambassador who was sent to Hungary by the failed US administration, but left without success and in disgrace," Szijjarto wrote on Facebook.
And, not surprisingly, the president claimed that "Nobody “has ever gone through what I go through—this is a disgrace."
Mark: Trent was an absolute disgrace in a Liverpool shirt.
Alabama Rep. Barry Moore called Clinton’s receipt of the medal a “disgrace to the memory of the four brave Americans she abandoned in Benghazi,” a sentiment seconded by Ohio Rep. Warren Davidson.
But, by many accounts, Yoon is now a disgraced leader - impeached by parliament and suspended from office, he awaits the decision of the constitutional court which can remove him from office.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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