Verwenden Sie „unkind“ in einem Satz
unkind Beispielsätze
unkind
1. Our knowledge has made us cynical, our cleverness hard and unkind
2. The years have sometimes been unkind
3. Very smart of you to notice, but unkind to tell people that I was the cause of his death
4. Perhaps your mind dictates that you cannot be happy if your friend is unkind to you
5. How unkind he was to say that--but I wasn't always
6. And she was as f loud as their old Sergeant in the College (a f nightmare they do not wish to be f reminded of when sober or drunk) and everyone laughed at them in an f unkind way
7. And it is not compassionate and unkind to not address
8. The mountain grew ever more unkind
9. Stand up now,” she said in a mildly authoritative but not unkind way
10. “Though it would be unkind to the rest of us if only we five are granted the honor of sharing your thoughts that way
11. "I do think my father and mother are unkind," she said
12. “That’s extremely unkind, Lope,” the Professor said
13. He was hard on her but on the whole not unkind; he had even mentioned the possibility of freedom on one occasion
14. As for Thad—not merely unkind but actively malicious
15. unkind thoughts as she irritated him like any sibling would
16. “Ren has, you know, never laid an unkind hand on me, you know? I love her, she’s been my savior in, you know, this ordeal
17. should be mean and unkind though we
18. According to Bob, they also never uttered an unkind word about the United States government and what it had done to them
19. way unkind; but not helpful to the victim
20. When a rule is laid down that nothing unkind or critical must be said about
21. of it we should slightly diminish the number of unkind or critical things that
22. wherever there is anything which seems in the least suspicious or unkind, it
23. ‘Hasn’t he proved that he’s a changed man? What has his past got to do with our future life? Didn’t he pay the price for it in full measure? After all that suffering would he ever cause suffering to others? And hasn’t he proved his mettle by funding the very roof that shelters me? Isn’t that enough to be indebted to him all my life? What is it if not a paranoia to focus on his past, ignoring his current credentials? How unkind of me to think he would take advantage of women, given his zeal to help them! What if he really proposes?’
24. Be not discouraged by the thoughtless and unkind attitude of your fellows; go on in the joy and liberty of the kingdom of heaven
25. Kill him! Was the thought unkind in his unbalanced mind
26. His mother seemed ineffectual but not unkind
27. Life has been unkind to her and now she is a runaway from a bad relationship
28. Of course this is all unfair and unkind
29. Now that I am saying this I know that I was being unkind to myself and to the memory of how we had once loved each other
30. I had no wish to be unkind, but I believed in those days (what experience has taught me to think possibly open to doubt) that in intimate relations one should speak the truth
31. She knew it would be unkind to turn the man away because he had probably traveled from a great distance
32. We’ve cleared your path of unkind things, she said
33. Life is not as unkind to the self-introspecting man as it is to a self-reflecting bull for it lends him the scope to contain the damages the vagaries of his habit occasions; but still, save a Gary Sobers, who said he never committed the same mistake twice, man fails to benefit from the let-offs of fate, and that only proves that man is more adept at thwarting the perils without but not at averting the banes within
34. himself to be provoked by stares or unkind remarks
35. unfairness and unkind treatment of the pre-
36. ’ She said it with an edge of disapproval as if she thought he would be most unkind to refuse
37. The incidents alluded to on the previous page are but some of the unkind to heinous “crimes
38. Such suffering is only driven away by aggression and the perpetration of mean and unkind actions, so that the spirit can forget its misery and distress
39. So Pim really wasn’t being unkind when he said that he
40. said unkind words, been selfish to those in need, and more
41. But seriously, I do see that it must have annoyed you, and I soon left off being so unkind as to laugh
42. It was in November that we were there, and we splashed about in a raw, wet cold,--rain on the verge of sleet and snow, a bitter wind at the corners, the omnibuses all full (we could not afford the dearer and more respectable tram), and everybody we met had an unkind strange face that stared at us, in spite of hurry and umbrellas, with a thoroughness and comprehensiveness that must be peculiar to Berlin
43. My confidence is swept away by his unkind words
44. You will think me quite savagely unkind, but I can't help that
45. Like the almond trees in the suburban gardens round London that flower when the winds are cruellest, the autumn crocuses seem too frail to face the cold nights we are having now; yet it is just when conditions are growing unkind that they come out
46. And she pictured herself turning gradually into her own caricature, an unkind caricature--more than unkind, a highly malicious parody of what she used to be--still going to parties because she couldn't bear to be alone, and when she got to them hardly able to keep her eyes open, still snatching at invitations and ordering new frocks; an old woman who would be explained to the indifferent young ones as somebody who once was much more beautiful than they could ever hope to be
47. They made a tremendous fuss at the time of their several departures out of her life, wringing her heart-strings and giving her a painful feeling of having perhaps been unkind, but in fact each departure was the beginning of better and happier things for them
48. In that moment, I realized that with everything I had told him, about the death of my father and about my worries for my mother, he had not said one thing cruel or unkind
49. And Martha, sorry that Nigella should have let herself sound unkind, when at heart she was often quite a dear, began hurriedly to unfold their plan in more detail
50. What with Niggs sounding unkind when she wasn't, and Fanny saying a nasty word when she shouldn't--one of those nasty words beginning with b, which Martha kept carefully from her two boys and girl, but which somehow they seemed to know about,--and what with, that horrid Edward Montmorency getting into the conversation, she felt her hands, never much good, she was afraid, were full