dishonorable in A Sentence

    1

    Dishonorable discharge will be a bullet or worse.

    0
    2

    How come we're Dishonorable?

    0
    3

    What Dishonorable things can I do?

    0
    4

    You want me to lie? And be Dishonorable?

    0
    5

    Without him around, wouldn't that be very Dishonorable?

    0
    6

    Those are Dishonorable loves; but there are honorable ones,

    0
    7

    I would have thought you Dishonorable had you not.

    0
    8

    A woman who broke that code was Dishonorable and unacceptable.

    0
    9

    Lewis and others think that children should not be condemned for their Dishonorable behavior.

    0
    10

    In the eyes of the universe, is it Dishonorable not to pay back money you owe?

    0
    11

    For we renounce Dishonorable and hidden acts, not walking by craftiness, nor by adulterating the Word of God.

    0
    12

    In medieval Japan, it was considered Dishonorable if a samurai's sword couldn't cut through an opponent's body in one stroke.

    0
    13

    Setting a priority for one's investigations over the invisibility formula can prove itself compromising, putting me in a Dishonorable position.

    0
    14

    He is also not expected to desert his post and flee to his parents' house, which is considered both illegal, and Dishonorable.

    0
    15

    But if any man considers himself to seem Dishonorable, concerning a virgin who is of adult age, and so it ought to be, he may do as he wills.

    0
    16

    Jackson believed that the Dishonorable people were the rumormongers, who in essence questioned and dishonored Jackson himself by, in attempting to drive the Eatons out, daring to tell him who he could and could not have in his cabinet.

    0
    17

    After his Dishonorable discharge, Miranda slowly made his way back to Arizona, and, true to his modus operandi up to this point, spent time in a jail in Texas for vagrancy and in federal prison in Chillicothe, Ohio, and Lompoc, California for stealing a car and taking it across state lines.

    0
    18

    As the custom evolved, a selected attendant(kaishakunin, his second) stood by, and on the second stroke would perform daki-kubi, where the warrior is all but decapitated leaving only a slight band of flesh attaching the head to the body, so as to not let the head fall off and roll on the ground, which was considered Dishonorable in feudal Japan.

    0