dispiriting in A Sentence

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    So why are school dinners still so Dispiriting?

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    I'm sad to say that what we found is deeply Dispiriting.

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    However, researchers from Guinness have recently unearthed some data that beer-lovers will find, ahem, Dispiriting.

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    Even when, unable to find the light, they grew somewhat dispirited, they never once complained.

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    Our ordinary daily conflicts can soon become exhausting and Dispiriting because no solutions are arrived at.

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    Chatwin finds Ushuaia, the world's most southernmost city, especially Dispiriting, full of“blue-faced inhabitants[who] glared at strangers unkindly”.

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    Gore Vidal told Christopher Hitchens that the three most Dispiriting words in the English language were“Joyce Carol Oates”?

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    Such labels will only dispirit you and make it more difficult for you to fulfill your parental duties.​ - Proverbs 24: 10.

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    9

    What makes Serena and June's tense relationship so Dispiriting is that the bond they share rests on little more than their shared whiteness.

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    10

    The word comes from the Latin fortis which means brave; and a comforter was someone who enabled some dispirited creature to be brave.

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    11

    It is Dispiriting to lose a thought in a second, 86,400 seconds in a day, not knowing when the next lapse will occur;

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    12

    The more I thought about it, the more dispirited I became, and the more I felt a great sense of grievance, piteousness, and loneliness.

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    13

    While it's hard to pass on a chance to stoke startup schadenfreude, perhaps we could focus less on these rare, unrepresentative, and Dispiriting examples?

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    14

    I was no longer disconsolate and dispirited, but I put my whole mind to reading the word of God, going to meetings, and fellowshiping on the truth.

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    15

    I was no longer disconsolate and dispirited, but I put my whole mind to reading the word of God, going to meetings, and fellowship on the truth.

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    16

    Nothing is so Dispiriting as reading a novel or seeing a film by a veteran writer who seems not to have looked out a window in 20 years.

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    17

    Although Kipling did not much care for his new house, whose design, he claimed, left its occupants feeling dispirited and gloomy, he managed to remain productive and socially active.

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    18

    Faced with brazen harassment by state agencies, and dispirited by serial electoral setbacks, the Opposition had become lifeless but these results indicate that prospects of an alternative are not entirely dark, particularly when it comes to State polls.

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    19

    Comte's austere and"slightly Dispiriting" philosophy of humanity viewed as alone in an indifferent universe(which can only be explained by"positive" science) and with nowhere to turn but to each other, was even more influential in Victorian England than the theories of Charles Darwin or Karl Marx.

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    20

    Comte's austere and"slightly Dispiriting" philosophy of humanity viewed as alone in an indifferent universe(which can only be explained by"positive" science) and with no where to turn but to each other, was even more influential in Victorian England than the theories of Charles Darwin or Karl Marx.

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    21

    According to Davies(pp. 28-29), Comte's austere and"slightly Dispiriting" philosophy of humanity viewed as alone in an indifferent universe(which can only be explained by"positive" science) and with nowhere to turn but to each other, was even more influential in Victorian England than the theories of Charles Darwin or Karl Marx.

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    22

    According to Davies(pp. 28–29), Comte's austere and"slightly Dispiriting" philosophy of humanity viewed as alone in an indifferent universe(which can only be explained by"positive" science) and with nowhere to turn but to each other, was even more influential in Victorian England than the theories of Charles Darwin or Karl Marx.

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    23

    According to Davies(pp. 28- 29), Comte's austere and"slightly Dispiriting" philosophy of humanity viewed as alone in an indifferent universe(which can only be explained by"positive" science) and with nowhere to turn but to each other, was even more influential in Victorian England than the theories of Charles Darwin or Karl Marx. ^ Davies,

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