Usar "dishonorable" en una oración
dishonorable oraciones de ejemplo
dishonorable
1. Bahkmar wondered at the shallowness of it all, 'she's an electric whack-off stick,' he wanted to say, but that would be dishonorable wouldn't it? It was his oath to keep that knowledge of what she was, as well as the details of her code, from Jaseem
2. He began to feel that what the traffickers did was far less dishonorable than the actions of his colleagues and would have preferred to lock away half of the OIJ before even the worst of them
3. “Vydor, I must confess when I first heard that the Dark Knights had been wiped out but you lived, I assumed they died covering your dishonorable retreat
4. There is nothing dishonorable about any earthly career we choose and there is nothing to prevent us from pursuing the eternal career at the same time
5. And of not being for Gertrude's unfortunate intervention, I had turned out to be victorious for wide margin and Leticia’s defeat would have been much more crushing and dishonorable
6. Doing so would have been dishonorable and not in keeping with Japanese tradition
7. Regardless, the dishonorable Admiral Akihiko Sato’s ship had finally sailed for the last time
8. The Romans never crucified a Roman citizen; only slaves and subject peoples were subjected to this dishonorable mode of death
9. I would imagine that the Chiefs would drag their feet with this job unless subject to immediate dismissal under general discharge (not honorable, but not dishonorable)
10. dishonorable and unrighteousness thing!” When he had finished, his eyes were as
11. did not want to have anything in common with this sleazy and dishonorable man
12. He would never do the dishonorable things Vachlan did; he would never have left you when you were pregnant
13. Basil was never dishonorable; he was at times terribly immature
14. These are as corrupting as individual beggars Plutarch's "Morals" contains this lesson: " A beggar asking an alms of a Lacedaemo- nian, he said:--'-Well, should I give thee anything, thou wilt be the greater beggar, for he that first gave thee money made thee idle, and is the cause of this base and dishonorable way of living
15. But now, after such dishonorable usage, who can tell what were his designs on her
16. Along with his conviction had come a dishonorable discharge—standard procedure
17. Rather than live and bear the shame of imprisonment, the soldier must die and avoid leaving a dishonorable name
18. ) The raising of this question by a hostile department was in Alexey Alexandrovitch’s opinion a dishonorable proceeding, seeing that in every department there were things similar and worse, which no one inquired into, for well-known reasons of official etiquette
19. Though Anna had obstinately and with exasperation contradicted Vronsky when he told her their position was impossible, at the bottom of her heart she regarded her own position as false and dishonorable, and she longed with her whole soul to change it
20. be dishonorable in his behavior to me
21. “You wouldn’t have let me do anything dishonorable but you would sell yourself to a man you didn’t love—and bear helplessness
22. "And was that business—or was it not—a thoroughly dishonorable one—nay, one that, if its nature had been made public, might have ranked those concerned in it with thieves and convicts?"
23. "To fail," answered her father, "is to commit the most dishonorable
24. ‘But no! Why did this thought never occur to me before?’ and again he told himself that it was impossible, that there would be something unnatural, and as it seemed to him dishonorable, in this marriage
25. After his first visit Boris said to himself that Natasha attracted him just as much as ever, but that he must not yield to that feeling, because to marry her, a girl almost without fortune, would mean ruin to his career, while to renew their former relations without intending to marry her would be dishonorable
26. All he cared about was gaiety and women, and as according to his ideas there was nothing dishonorable in these tastes, and he was incapable of considering what the gratification of his tastes entailed for others, he honestly considered himself irreproachable, sincerely despised rogues and bad people, and with a tranquil conscience
27. “To hang him without trial was dishonorable
28. "I don't know why there aren't laws against such base, dishonorable people
29. ) The raising of this question by a hostile department was in Alexey Alexandrovitch's opinion a dishonorable proceeding, seeing that in every department there were things similar and worse, which no one inquired into, for well-known reasons of official etiquette
30. And not with out inward pride, and not without reason, he thought that any other man would long ago have been in difficulties, would have been forced to some dishonorable course, if he had found himself in such a difficult position
31. He knew he would play a prominent part of some sort, but Alyosha, who was attached to him, was distressed to see that his friend Rakitin was dishonorable, and quite unconscious of being so himself, considering, on the contrary, that because he would not steal money left on the table he was a man of the highest integrity
32. Though I'm full of low desires, and love what's low, I'm not dishonorable
33. Write that I should think it dishonorable to say
34. “Women are often dishonorable,” she snarled
35. Another man will not commit the murder, but will feel and think like him, and is as dishonorable in soul
36. ’ You will say that was dishonorable: it's dishonorable to slander even the dead, and even to save a brother
37. “But no! Why did this thought never occur to me before?” and again he told himself that it was impossible, that there would be something unnatural, and as it seemed to him dishonorable, in this marriage
38. After his first visit Borís said to himself that Natásha attracted him just as much as ever, but that he must not yield to that feeling, because to marry her, a girl almost without fortune, would mean ruin to his career, while to renew their former relations without intending to marry her would be dishonorable
39. All he cared about was gaiety and women, and as according to his ideas there was nothing dishonorable in these tastes, and he was incapable of considering what the gratification of his tastes entailed for others, he honestly considered himself irreproachable, sincerely despised rogues and bad people, and with a tranquil conscience carried his head high
40. The pretended blockade of almost every port upon the Baltic; the blockade of the eastern and southern coasts of the North Sea, unaccompanied by any naval force; the nominal investment of the ports on the south of the British channel, and on the European coast of the Mediterranean sea; the occlusion of the Black Sea, by the blockade of the Dardanelles and Smyrna, and in fine the blockade of all the places from the Straits of Gibraltar to the Arctic Ocean, are acts which, notwithstanding their unexampled enormity in themselves, sink into perfect insignificance, when we consider the base attempts meditated by the orders of November, 1807, and the consequent statutes of Parliament, to reduce this country again to a state of colonial slavery! Sir, at the very thought of these infamous orders and acts of the British Government, I feel emotions of indignation and contempt, to repress which would be dishonorable
41. That the letter signed Francis James Jackson, headed "Circular," dated the 13th of November, 1809, and published and circulated through the country, is a still more direct and aggravated insult and affront to the American people and their Government, as it is evidently an insidious attempt to excite their resentments and distrusts against their own Government, by appealing to them, through false or fallacious disguises, against some of its acts; and to excite resentments and divisions amongst the people themselves, which can only be dishonorable to their own characters and ruinous to their own interests; and the Congress of the United States do hereby solemnly pledge themselves to the American people and to the world to stand by and support the Executive Government in its refusal to receive any further communications from the said Francis James Jackson, and to call into action the whole force of the nation if it should become necessary in consequence of the conduct of the Executive Government in this respect to repel such insults and to assert and maintain the rights, the honor, and the interests of the United States
42. No, sir, it is not possible that an American Congress does exist, or can ever exist, that would not spurn from themselves every vestige of an idea that they could be brought, under any circumstances, to perform so degrading and dishonorable a task
43. Erskine, under such scandalous and dishonorable circumstances as could only lead to a disavowal of it; and you yourself were so well apprised of them, and so conscious of their inevitable operation, as even to think it unreasonable to complain of the disavowal
44. And now let me ask you, sir, what is there dishonorable, unfair, or even unusual in this proceeding, which is the whole amount of Mr
45. Jackson keeps his ingenuity constantly upon the stretch respecting this very act of substitution, evidently with a view of producing an impression by the insinuation, that the Executive Government of the United States had more than its share in that arrangement, and, in fact, was concerned in a dishonorable and scandalous combination with his predecessor, Mr
46. I will not dwell on the long catalogue of our wrongs and disgrace, which has been repeated until the sensibility of the nation is benumbed by the dishonorable detail
47. If the circumstances were such as could only lead to a disavowal, they must have been dishonorable, and Mr
48. Sir, they feel in common, I trust, with a great majority of every portion of this Union, the degradation of our country, in submitting for a moment longer to the dishonorable terms proposed directly or indirectly by the British Government
49. However dishonorable a transaction like this may be deemed by our Government, whose motives and conduct are directed and squared by the principles of morality and justice, yet, I believe, it is not thought so very disgraceful in the British Government, as to be beneath her first characters to undertake
50. It appeared to him that Great Britain considered no means dishonorable provided they would accomplish the attainment of her object