Use "aggrieved" in a sentence
aggrieved example sentences
aggrieved
1. Nilanajana Debi was aggrieved with the state of affairs
2. The children were aggrieved with such an
3. ’ Hilary announced in an aggrieved tone
4. To prevent any oppression by those bye-laws, it was by the same act ordained, that if any seven members of the company conceived themselves aggrieved by any bye-law which should be enacted after the passing of this act, they might appeal to the board of trade and plantations (to the authority of which a committee of the privy council has now succeeded), provided such appeal was brought within twelve months after the bye-law was enacted; and that, if any seven members conceived themselves aggrieved by any bye-law which had been enacted before the passing of this act, they might bring a like appeal, provided it was within twelve months after the day on which this act was to take place
5. He knew he trod a fine line between that of the responsible leader, effectively of the Eastern Alliance, and the aggrieved aggressor
6. He looked at his hired help and tried to look aggrieved, “I told you he wasn’t to be injured
7. ” He tossed an aggrieved brotherhood-of-men look at Arbitan, who did not acknowledge it with anything more than a chilly stare
8. Occasionally they feel aggrieved
9. dear, and well I know it, and have always known it," she said in an aggrieved tone, "but that I am as ugly as that picture makes me out I will never, no, never believe
10. I didn't feel aggrieved in the slightest; in fact I loved it
11. Derek watched as his aggrieved companion stormed up the
12. matter what documents Zero provides, proving that the aggrieved
13. It has been very easy for other aggrieved social groups to be intoxicated by the cyanide of Marxism
14. In that way they will and do create coalitions of the aggrieved
15. "Momma!" Frankie was aggrieved
16. Why had he pulled up stakes? She was the aggrieved one
17. I told you I don't want the Greeks to feel more aggrieved than they are
18. What surprising fragility assaults the aggrieved heart, which nude of any falsity covers itself into a shelter after the banal mask of the indifference hurt it by the inclemency of a not corresponded love! And it was this indifference the one that allowed me to remain unscathed before his closeness
19. Matthew was aggrieved at watching another boy riding away on his ‘chariot’ as he called his bicycle
20. Kate was getting on in years herself and felt aggrieved at times at being the one who because she lived the nearest to her, had been left to be her sole carer
21. so they could not be aggrieved
22. • Listening to the aggrieved
23. to go first?” The prince was much aggrieved, but relented
24. If others feel aggrieved about that, it only amounts to grieving over the recompense to the unfortunates while themselves enjoying the benefits of a more fortunate birth
25. Well, the vaisyas, who always felt aggrieved at being deprived of their rightful exaltation, commensurate with their wealth, in the Aryan polity were ever prone to look for the greener social pastures; first in the Buddhism and thereafter under the Islamic banner
26. ask the aggrieved, “Was that your child?”
27. “I don’t care if this thing is a mutt or pedigreed hound - I just want him OFF me! Will you guys quit with the joking and get this beast off me?!!” An aggrieved voice reiterated quite indignantly
28. “Falcon you’d better NOT!” The aggrieved voice helplessly threatened
29. He felt aggrieved and humbled as he knew he would not be able to execute his tricks and magic on that day
30. These matters are confirmed by psychology and can never be denied, for how could our master Mohammad (cpth) not feel aggrieved, since Al’lah the Almighty says: “Then, you may wish to conceal some of that which has been inspired for you…”: he did not want to inform them of some of the noble verses, for they were still ignorant about Al’lah and vulgar; “…feeling aggrieved with announcing it (to them)”: i
31. King Stanislaw Everhorn was a kind and benevolent despot, of a predictably rotund profile for a monarch of middle years, and he was mightily aggrieved that such a wretched creature might exist among his subjects
32. Angry with Fanny for being so foolish as to call him darling--he hadn't called her darling once, having taken the greatest care not to drop back into old habits--angry with Audrey for being such a rough little diamond, such a hedgehog, such a porcupine, such an everything that was ill-mannered and with spikes, he was also aggrieved on his own behalf, who had, since Fanny's arrival, been so specially glad whenever Audrey was in the room
33. Now why should she have shrunk? he wondered, aggrieved
34. She accordingly got on to it and had stayed there ever since, mysteriously frail, an object of solicitude and sympathy, a being before whose helplessness the most aggressive or aggrieved husband must needs be helpless, too
35. She felt relief, but a pained relief; an aggrieved, almost angry relief; such as he feels who putting his entire strength into the effort to lift a vessel he fears is too heavy for him finds it light and empty
36. Also the thought that absolutely nothing had been gained from this trip aggrieved him
37. Almost all were aggrieved to lose their favorite son, and many watched secretly, with tearful eyes, as their beloved child was sent away
38. Consumed with his need to forget and so aggrieved of what happened on the banks of the river, he was hardly even aware of the fragility of his own mind
39. He hadn't answered the question but he didn't need to as Oak had already gleaned from him that when Denver was in the City all looked to him, and an aggrieved Washington watched on in fear of displacement
40. At that, she stopped and looked at me aggrieved
41. � Whether they felt appreciative of or aggrieved by those parents and/or caregivers, they all saw them as essential elements in the becoming of self
42. Aggrieved, convinced they were examining him from their still hidden position, had
43. Reappearing in front, its face looked aggrieved as if about to lose its prize
44. Appalled and aggrieved,
45. Kyboes opposed their promptings to begin with, much aggrieved
46. "And pray, what time were you directed to appear, sir?" shouted the assistant superintendent, seeming for some unknown reason more and more aggrieved
47. "Then this is my fault again," said Luzhin, aggrieved
48. And so, according to the laws of the accursed duel, I may have received offence, but not insult, for neither women nor children can maintain it, nor can they wound, nor have they any way of standing their ground, and it is just the same with those connected with religion; for these three sorts of persons are without arms offensive or defensive, and so, though naturally they are bound to defend themselves, they have no right to offend anybody; and though I said just now I might have received offence, I say now certainly not, for he who cannot receive an insult can still less give one; for which reasons I ought not to feel, nor do I feel, aggrieved at what that good man said to me; I only wish he had stayed a little longer, that I might have shown him the mistake he makes in supposing and maintaining that there are not and never have been any knights-errant in the world; had Amadis or any of his countless
49. aggrieved, I said: "I am sure, if you knew all that I have suffered, you would show
50. On the other hand what incensed him more inwardly was the blatant jokes of the cabman and so on who passed it all off as a jest, laughing 1530 immoderately, pretending to understand everything, the why and the wherefore, and in reality not knowing their own minds, it being a case for the two parties themselves unless it ensued that the legitimate husband happened to be a party to it owing to some anonymous letter from the usual boy Jones, who happened to come across them at the crucial moment in a loving position locked in one another's arms, drawing attention to their illicit proceedings and leading up to a domestic rumpus and the erring fair one begging forgiveness of her lord and master upon her knees and promising to sever the connection and not receive his visits any more if only the aggrieved husband would overlook the matter and let bygones be bygones with tears in her eyes though possibly with her tongue in her fair cheek at the same time as quite possibly there were several others