Verwenden Sie „demoralized“ in einem Satz
demoralized Beispielsätze
demoralized
1. Such comparisons further fail the litmus test of motorists frustrated and demoralized by mental exhaustion
2. It was the Soviets' late entry that utterly demoralized a fading Japan and caused its surrender, much like the US's late entry into World War I insured a much faster German defeat
3. Despondent and demoralized; they lacked the will to do anything about their situation
4. “The discussions at the Nicene Council (AD 325) revealed the fact that there were three parties present: the Strict Arians, the Semi-Arians and the Alexander-Athanasian party…The latter party, with the help of Constantine and the Western bishops secured the adoption of [the] creed…The sons of Constantine continued to favor the Semi-Arian party, which included a large majority of the Eastern bishops, but the Western Churches generally adhered to the Nicene creed…The distracted condition of the Orient, due to the war with Persia, and the demoralized state of many of the bishoprics under Arian leadership made it relatively easy for Theodosius the Great to espouse and support the Nicene party…Arianism was soon suppressed within the empire, but it continued for a long time to prevail among the Barbarians” (Encyc
5. The old generation, the parents, were demoralized
6. was way too confused, demoralized, in fear, guilt and ashamed and totally exhausted with life
7. He asked only a thousand horsemen and the presence of Conan, to hearten his demoralized subjects
8. Bolts driven by the demoralized arbalesters glanced from their shields, their bent helmets
9. However, I was so demoralized by now I was going on „zombie mode", numbness of sorts
10. Chernow added, when Standard Oil subdued Tidewater, it again demoralized the independents and suggested that all opposition to the behemoth was a foolish, chimerical dream
11. The government appointed corrupt chiefs and left village life demoralized
12. “I thought you would enjoy yourselves, even if this isn’t quite what you’re accustomed to in London and the European capitals,” she added as though she was demoralized by the implied inferiority of the local culture
13. � Many Waffen-SS, utterly demoralized by now, threw down their weapons and surrendered
14. Were they there? Does that even make sense? Barron was demoralized and shocked
15. and, demoralized, decided to leave the area
16. It will also result in the United States Army coming out of the conflict as a broken, demoralized force, plus will cause massive anti-war riots all over the United States and will make the then President renounce a second mandate
17. In a demoralized society such as this one is getting to be, it’s really nice to hear romance isn't totally dead
18. If the BJP could sweep these states, it would be the ideal launch pad for the 2014 elections; the Congress, by contrast, would be demoralized by defeat
19. "It seems as if the forces of Dorgan are demoralized," I remarked the afternoon after the raid on Margot's
20. Those surviving the trip left their souls on the Atlantic—entering the institution of slavery empty and hollow, battered and beaten, demoralized and dehumanized
21. “What else the poor man could do? He was demoralized so much
22. This forces the Males to come running back to rescue the females from their demoralized social status as a beleaguered, attacked dominant elite animal society
23. After visiting the lawyer with my client and then the shop and my two demoralized employees, I took a cab to the Montazah Hilton where my wife was staying
24. He was demoralized and lay back in bed
25. For these there exists the refuge provided by the city or the State, where they can be sheltered, fed, clothed, and kept in comfortable existence, and-most important of all-where they can be isolated from the well-doing and industrious poor, who are liable to be demoralized by contact with these unfortunates
26. "Oh, Laurie, is it really you? I thought you'd never come!" cried Amy, dropping the reins and holding out both hands, to the great scandalization of a French mamma, who hastened her daughter's steps, lest she should be demoralized by beholding the free manners of thesèmad English'
27. Hott would be very much impressed, he was demoralized receiving the graded essay and seeing in thick red ink marginalia advising Mac not to use words that are not understood
28. It’s been proven that writers are funnier when they are demoralized
29. He was ready to give up – then he thought of Caris, and how weary and demoralized she had looked, and he gave it one more try
30. But nothing more had been seen of the strange rabbit; and the loss of Mallow, with nothing to show for it, had upset and demoralized the Owsla a good deal
31. His officershad been demoralized by Kehaar's unexpected attack
32. Twice, the men rowed toward distant squalls, but each time, the rain sputtered out just as they reached it, leaving them exhausted and demoralized
33. By the time Symkyn had moved up to reinforce the two lonely brigades—one Charisian and one of rifle-armed Siddarmarkian regulars—and militia Eastshare had left to keep an eye on Cahnyr Kaitswyrth’s demoralized command, weather had ruled out any fresh offensive
34. What with the physical shocks incidental to my first interview with Professor Challenger and the mental ones which accompanied the second, I was a somewhat demoralized journalist by the time I found myself in Enmore Park once more
35. Industries especially favored by a developing demand may become demoralized through a still more rapid growth of supply
36. Within a very short time this rather obvious truth was brought home strikingly by the widening of the spread to over 14 points during the demoralized bond-market conditions of June 1932
37. There, like Napoleon's numbed dog army of foot-weary, undecided, and demoralized men, stood the shadowy but familiar mob, their hands full of pictures, pictures leaned against their legs, pictures on their backs, pictures stood upright and held by trembling, panic-whitened hands in the drifted snow
38. There, like Napoleon’s numbed dog-army of foot-weary, undecided, and demoralized men, stood the shadowy but familiar mob, their hands full of pictures—pictures leaned against their legs, pictures on their backs, pictures stood upright and held by trembling, panic-whitened hands in the drifted snow
39. They were as shell-shocked, demoralized, and confused as anyone could possibly be
40. Napoleon, however firmly he might believe in his lucky star, could scarcely have counted on such simplicity, and the French are right in saying that the historian will have to solve an interesting problem; how was it that a demoralized and exhausted army, hemmed in on every side by an enemy incomparably superior in numbers, who literally had only to put out their hand to seize their prey, found the way left open before them? The Russians retired—there were no obstacles, and the French army was allowed to retreat in peace along a route that was neither burnt nor devastated
41. And by way of preaching this Christian gospel and confirming it by Christian example, we imprison, we execute, guillotine, hang; we encourage the masses in idolatrous religions calculated to stultify them; the government authorizes the sale of brain-destroying poisons—wine, tobacco, opium; prostitution is legalized; we bestow land upon those who need it not; surrounded by misery, we display in our entertainments an unbridled extravagance; we render impossible in such ways any semblance of a Christian life, and do our best to destroy Christian ideas already established; and then, after doing all we can to demoralize men, we take and confine them like wild beasts in places from which they cannot escape, and where they will become more brutal than ever; or we murder the men we have demoralized, and then use them as an example to illustrate and prove our argument that people are only to be controlled by violence
42. And the unhappy individual to whom the abuse is addressed,—flautist, horn-blower, or singer,—physically and mentally demoralized, does not reply, and does what is demanded of him
43. The conductor knows that these people are so demoralized that they are no longer fit for anything but to blow trumpets and walk about with halberds and in yellow shoes, and that they are also accustomed to dainty, easy living, so that they will put up with anything rather than lose their luxurious life
44. Everyone knows on the contrary that men in authority—be they emperors, ministers, governors, or police officers—are always, simply from the possession of power, more liable to be demoralized, that is, to subordinate public interests to their personal aims than those who have not the power to do so
45. As the disposition of individuals to violence diminished, and as the habits of the people became more civilized, and as power grew more demoralized through lack of restraint, this advantage disappeared
46. They only utter a clucking sound with their tongues and sigh mournfully, knowing that they will see no more of the steady lads they have reared and trained to help them, that they will come back not the same quiet hard-working laborers, but for the most part conceited and demoralized, unfitted for their simple life
47. Sir, during embargo times our domestic enemies, encouraged by a proclamation issued under the authority of the King of England—I say, sir, those minions of royalty concentrating in the East, talked of the violation of laws as a virtue, they demoralized the community by raising the floodgates of civil disorder; they gave absolution to felons, and invited the commission of crimes by the omission of duty