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26 Sentences With "dishearteningly"

How to use dishearteningly in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "dishearteningly" and check conjugation/comparative form for "dishearteningly". Mastering all the usages of "dishearteningly" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Switching the clocks back does more than make it dishearteningly dark at 5:30 p.m.
Cantonese steak, a relic of British colonialism that fuses HP and Worcestershire sauces, was dishearteningly sweet.
Below is a challenge, sometimes dishearteningly so, but that just makes the progress that much more satisfying.
Religious homilies and paranoid exhortations spill from television sets where cartoons of men trapped in endlessly whirring machines dance dishearteningly.
Nobody smokes in the office, and though it's remained dishearteningly common, sexual harassment is an offense that can get you fired.
"BlacKkKlansman" captures the absurd aspects of this story, while still drawing parallels that make the movie feel urgent and dishearteningly relevant.
The anti-vax situation has become dishearteningly worse since I first wrote about the movement's impact on autistic people four years ago.
Sightly dishearteningly, however, the survey also indicates that in the UK an average of 1.2% of users sought emergency medical care after taking MDMA.
Finally, stories about people in positions of power behaving unethically and not having to pay the consequences have been dishearteningly common in recent days.
It joins a dishearteningly long list of other sites of atrocity throughout history, from Dachau to the Soviet gulags to America's WWII-era Japanese internment camps.
Who you are is revealed uncompromisingly right at the beginning of the game, and it's a viewpoint you'll revisit many times throughout: Anne staring dishearteningly at the mirror.
But none of that makes the Po-Go FOMO any easier to take, especially after recent years have seen dishearteningly late Japanese releases for things across the board.
Though it is unfortunately and dishearteningly normal for presidents to resist congressional oversight to a certain extent, the Trump administration may be taking such resistance to a new level.
So when an appeals court freed Mr. Lee, 49, on Monday by reducing his prison term to two and a half years and then suspending it, the scene was dishearteningly familiar for many.
Even when the reasons for protest proliferate, and acts of opposi­tion come to feel dishearteningly ineffective, it's very important for the defenders of liberal democracy to resist authoritarian strong­ men with courage and determination.
The response to Maria dishearteningly echoes a past disaster—how Nixon's White House policies of "benign neglect" leveled the streets of Puerto Rican neighborhoods in New York City, reducing them to rubble and dirt.
The West End is still one the most profitable quarter of nightclubs in the country, so despite its apparent and infamous legacy of racism, many of those who resent it the most are dishearteningly reliant on it.
But even worse than that was the second experiment, in which the researchers asked 222 white medical students and residents (med school graduates who are training in a specialty) the same questions — and got dishearteningly similar results.
Lingard and Jordan became intent on inventing vegan cheeses so similar to dairy cheeses that they could satisfy the void felt by many who dishearteningly rely on the soy- or coconut-based solutions common to upscale grocery stores.
Trump has also indicated his plans to push forward with hydraulic fracking across vast swaths of the country, and, perhaps most dishearteningly, to withdraw from the landmark Paris climate change deal to which 196 nations agreed in 2015.
Louis tells him that if he does, he will report to the authorities regarding Martín's undocumented landscaping workers. Realizing that he has no choice but to comply and leave the goods alone, he dishearteningly returns home. When he sees Norma, he offers her an embrace, but she instead folds her arms.
In contrast, Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times thought it was "a feeble and tedious satire",Kevin Thomas, "'Next Big Thing' Strains to Spoof Art Scene", Los Angeles Times, June 14, 2002. and Ed Park of The Village Voice said that "Posner's dishearteningly unsophisticated treatment itself rings false".Ed Park, "Canvas Sneaker", The Village Voice, May 28, 2002.
Dietz had started to write the play as early as 1990 with the title The Usual Suspects. This version had a stage reading by the Arizona Theatre Company in 1992. Later, Christopher McQuarrie wrote a hit movie with that title, and Dietz "begrudgingly" changed his title.Liz Engelman Private Eyes Review for the Hippodrome State Theater (1998) By sheer coincidence, both the play and the movie leave the viewer at the end somewhat dishearteningly uncertain if anything just seen happened "for real" (in the play or movie) or if all scenes were merely fantasized by one of the characters.
During the night of 15 to 16 May, Lévis was informed of the appearance of two British vessels between Île d'Orléans and Pointe-Lévis. Dishearteningly, he immediately sent orders to the French vessels transporting the supplies of his army to retire and to his two frigates to be on alert and to be also ready to retire. Bad weather caused his orders to the vessels to be delayed. On 16 May at daybreak, in response to the expressed wishes of Murray, Commodore Robert Swanton gave orders to and Lowestoffe, soon followed by , to pass the town and to attack the French vessels in the river above.
Hal Erickson, author of Television Cartoon Shows, An Illustrated Encyclopedia stated that “C.O.P.S. had potential--though it was a potential left unrealized by the dishearteningly flat animation style.”Erickson, 2005. p.214 Erickson noted that C.O.P.S. “scored with a sturdy inner lining of social satire” such as Mayor Davis’ cost-cutting attempts that would unwittingly aid the cause of the villain. IGN gave the show a rating of three out of ten, stating that “to fully appreciate this series one must have a tolerance for clunky, mechanical animation (the kind that says “We really didn’t spend too much money on it”) and a love for ’80s-style action”; and that “it offers little in terms of character development.
Fuji TV used the fictional "All officers are to be armed" (拳銃携帯命令 Kenjū Keitai Meirei) order, which the portrayed bureaucracy is often reluctant to hand down. (In reality, it is compulsory for a uniformed officer to be armed, and plainclothes officers are required to be armed if they expect to be exposed to any danger.) The main character of the series is a young detective named Shunsaku Aoshima (played by Yūji Oda). Originally a corporate salesman, Aoshima decided to join the police department out of heroic idealism, expecting a life of adventure and excitement. Once inside, he is completely underwhelmed by the reality of police work, finding it dishearteningly similar to corporate employment.

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