And -as we may all know -without community, independence can becomemiserable isolation.
2
For nothing is so pitiable as a man who has becomemiserable after having been happy.
3
I married to set away from a home that had been happy, but which had becomemiserable.
4
I am becomemiserable, and am bowed down even to the end: I walked sorrowful all the day long.
5
In the view which I have taken above they becomemiserable as teachers, and still more miserable as scholars.
6
So shall all my enemies, the children, becomemiserable swine, while no one will think of accusing me of the sorcery.
7
If you eat too many of those berries, you'll learn too much, and that gives you indigestion, and then you becomemiserable.
8
Prince Harry's mother was living proof that a woman marrying into royalty could quickly becomemiserable in spite of all the privilege.
9
But there must be boundaries, otherwise we becomemiserable. Q: Why feel the need to write stories, as opposed to just being an actress?
10
If the rich old man has no enjoyment apart from money-making, his old age becomesmiserable.
11
Having survived the entire ordeal, it's only after encountering Australians that the asylum seeker becomesmiserable.
12
The Stamp Act was passed, but stamp could not be sold, and the lives of stamp-venders becamemiserable.
13
All her interests were in Seaton, and she becamemiserable directly if she were away from her native city.
14
Then indeed I becamemiserable.
15
An English ploughman becomes necessary; the English ploughman accordingly comes, but shortly becomesmiserable amongst French habits and French fellow-labourers.
16
His money accumulated so fast that he could not find a place to put it, and his life becamemiserable.