Former congressional colleagues expressed dismay at the news reports following the indictment.
2
How can we account for this widespread fear and dismay in Europe?
3
Bereaved family members reacted with dismay to the level of the fine.
4
The succession of Ferdinand excited especial dismay and indignation in the Palatinate.
5
Of course, as Pandora discovered to her dismay, even openness has consequences.
1
Central banks' purchases of government securities artificially depress the cost of borrowing.
2
Other studies have shown that TFA teachers depress young students' reading scores.
3
The alleged Russian campaign to depress turnout of minority voters is wrong.
4
Video games can also distract, depress, have a negative impact on health.
5
Higher inflation tends to depress bond prices, lifting yields in the process.
1
To defeat an army, you must demoralize and throw it into disorder.
2
Everything was done to demoralize, frighten and overawe judges, witnesses and jurors.
3
The fear exists that the fall of the captain will demoralize the rest.
4
We indulge in feelings which tend to demoralize the whole character.
5
In plain English, he wishes to demoralize only the higher classes of society.
1
It believes a full apology would demoralise its citizens and project weakness.
2
Too much politics in our food threatened to demoralise our large cities.
3
Analysts said the move could demoralise the remaining cadres of ULFA.
4
Two or three executions of this kind usually sufficed to demoralise the enemy.
5
It hadn't struck me before, but it is a fact; I do demoralise children.
1
This did not dishearten or deject the golden party; far from it.
2
Some names stimulate and encourage the owner, others deject and paralyse him.'
3
The things which do not disturb her temper may, perhaps, deject her spirits.
4
Having these to look to, what should stagger our faith, or deject our hope?
5
I must deject you now and make you listen to me; there is not much more to hear.
1
No huge pylons castdown upon the ground their forms in darkness.
2
Fan glanced at her in sudden fear and castdown her eyes.
3
He castdown his eyes before me; he stammered when he spoke.
4
The Protestants remained at home during the period, sorrowful and castdown.
5
I will see your nation castdown and your allies drawn away.
1
Now that your identity crisis is over, let's getdown to business.
2
She said all she wants to do is getdown to work.
3
Right, that's pleasantries out of the way, let's getdown to business.
4
Well, then, let's getdown to the matters at hand, shall we?
5
I always try to include basic things to getdown to earth.
Uso de dispirit em inglês
1
These meditations, although they made him thoughtful, did not dispirit him.
2
These proceedings tended, in a great degree, to dispirit the attendants of Mr. Park.
3
No reverses seemed to dispirit him, no misfortune appeared to ruffle his calm, brave temperament.
4
The whole surrounding was calculated to dispirit the five officers, to say nothing of the occasion.
5
Even our largest problems need not dispirit us.
6
How little it takes to dispirit a lover!
7
He cannot hope to defeat Tesse, but he may wear out and dispirit his men by constant attacks.
8
It is an hortation which, by whomsoever delivered, would tend to dispirit the bravest and most honest of witnesses.
9
In fact, if one is not built to be easily dispirited, well, it is not easy to dispirit one.
10
However, you have chosen your course, and as it is too late to draw back now, I would not dispirit you.
11
More than fifty men, all of Marion's, were killed or wounded in this affair, but the loss did not dispirit the survivors.
12
In his examination of the Messiah, he justly observes some deviations from the inspired author, which weaken the imagery, and dispirit the expression.
13
The failure to get a few days' extension of time on so important a sum had the effect to dispirit Ellis a good deal.
14
A lax manner of administering justice, falsely termed moderation, has a tendency both to dispirit public virtue, and promote the growth of public evils.
15
The air, so sharp and chill after the tropics, served still further to dispirit him and add the concluding note of depression to his home-coming.
16
Josephus, fearing that their cries would dispirit the men, ordered them all to be locked up in their houses, and then calmly awaited the assault.