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64 Sentences With "most dreadful"

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

Most patients, even in the most dreadful conditions, opt for life.
Ending a relationship is easily one of life's most dreadful chores.
But they did deadly serious work in the most dreadful conditions imaginable.
It's one of the most dreadful things that can happen to a human being.
The few times I ventured topical jokes were among the most dreadful moments of my life.
The sense of danger is palpable, as is the sense of misery after the most dreadful scenes.
Flying is one of the most dreadful experiences for people who do not fit neatly into a space that's 17 inches wide.
A cancer diagnosis is devastating regardless of where a person lives, but the disease can be most dreadful in resource-poor settings.
In it, Freeza, the most dreadful villain in the series thus far, arrives on Earth, seeking revenge after series protagonist Goku defeated him.
Now that the holidays are over, many companies are about to make their employees go through the most dreadful exercise of the year: the annual performance review.
Also, skin cancer is very common and treatable if found early, so even if you've dialed up your risk for it, it's not the most dreadful health hazard.
One imagines this was unaltered by the recent showdown of two of the league's most dreadful teams, the Knicks and the Washington Wizards, inside London's unlovable O2 arena.
Here's a good litmus test: If you're offended at the idea that real-life gamers are the most dreadful villains in video games then you're probably part of the problem.
Most dreadful of all, what led him to ignore his dying father's request for water, when his father was the only and dearest thing he had left in the world?
"The biggest, most dreadful thing we might face is rationing or triaging who gets ventilators," said Gabe Kelen, the director of the Office of Critical Event Preparedness at Johns Hopkins University.
" He added: "It is a treasure for all mankind and, as such, to witness its destruction in this most dreadful conflagration is a shattering tragedy, the unbearable pain of which we all share.
Although we have some of the necessary technology and regulatory framework to block the most dreadful robocalls that put consumers at risk, the number of scam robocalls has not lessened in recent years.
Opinion Columnist A first draft of this column was written before flames engulfed the Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Paris, before its spire fell in one of the most dreadful live images since Sept.
The most dreadful discovery took place at the end of February 2015, when we learned that you can not only be imprisoned but also shot dead in the center of Moscow because of your political activity.
Get to the fifth installment of a film series, especially a sci-fi action one with a reputation for mindless bloat, and you can generally assume you'll be looking at the franchise's most dreadful offering yet.
It may be one of the most dreadful poems ever written, worthy of inclusion in "The Stuffed Owl: An Anthology of Bad Verse," a collection that Wyndham Lewis and Charles Lee published, in 1930, to universal delight.
"The most dreadful thing is not that banks or the central bank do not realize there is an issue, but that people with salaries of 0003-40,000 roubles have to spend 20,000 on servicing their debt," the official said.
Even when the worst happens, Lorentzen doesn't turn the gore and tears into a spectacle, and it's instructive that some of the most dreadful moments take place off-camera or are conveyed through the triage patter or in later conversations.
Randall Miller, professor of American politics at Pennsylvania's Saint Joseph's University, told Reuters that it's bizarre that the super knowledgeable have blanked on some of Trump's most dreadful behaviors—like the heinous shit he's spewed about women and Latinos—but the phenomenon does make sense.
" In 2002, the legendary film director Robert Altman called the movie "the most dreadful piece of work I've seen in my entire life," while Ebert wrote in 1998 that its enduring power "comes not because it is a love story or a special effects triumph, but because it touches the deepest human feelings about living, dying, and being cherished.
On the orders of Khalid, the Muslims advanced. They launched a series of attacks along their entire front. The most dreadful carnage took place in a gulley in which human blood ran in a rivulet down to the wadi. As a result, this gulley became known as the Gulley of Blood-Shueib-ud-Dam, and it is still known by that name.
In "The Wild Swans" (De vilde svaner), a princess mutely undergoes the most dreadful trials in order to free her eleven brothers from a spell cast by an evil queen. When suspicions are aroused that she is a witch, she is sentenced to death but rescues her brothers at the last moment. Able then to speak, she tells her story and the king marries her.
In 1912, on the one year anniversary of the lynching of Zachariah Walker in Coatesville, Pennsylvania, Chapman gave a speech in which he called the lynching "one of the most dreadful crimes in history" and said "our whole people are...involved in the guilt." It was published as A Nation's Responsibility. Chapman became involved in politicsCrawford, Allan Pell (2013). "The Anti-Alinsky," The American Conservative, August 7.
In response, Dawson called the Kaiser's Germany "a most soul-destroying place", and complained that German intellectuals, "examine Christianity as if it were a kind of beetle." Dawson further lamented that his stay in that "most dreadful" country reminded him of "the state of society in Lord of the World."Joseph Pearce (2006), Literary Converts: Spiritual Inspiration in an Age of Unbelief, Ignatius Press, San Francisco. Page 40-41.
After being asked about Doctor Zhivago, she said, > The only thing that these two films share consists in the love which the > Russian women can carry; it is a topic approached by many novels. They love > up to the last drop of blood, till the most dreadful end, to the death; they > are capable of leaving family and children for the love of the man which > they have chosen.
Three days before the game he had his leg in a cast. He yielded however to the persuasions of the coach Schlosser and decided to step onto the pitch even if to assist and keep up the fighting spirit in the team. The sticking plaster was removed on Friday and he managed to hobble into the field on Sunday. The first half was the most dreadful in the history of all derbies.
Rebels continually resisted despite Vsetín being burned and many people executed in 1627. By 1642 rebels were fighting shoulder to shoulder with the Swedish army, but at the end they were defeated on January 26, 1644 by the Emperor's army. Some 200 participants of the rebellion were executed in Vsetín and it remains one of the most dreadful in the nation's history. Vsetín and villages in a wide surrounding area were burned.
382, Hong translation The "most dreadful thing of all is a personal existence that cannot coalesce in a conclusion,"Søren Kierkegaard, Stages on Life's Way, Hong p. 232 according to Kierkegaard. He asked his contemporaries if any of them had reached a conclusion about anything or did every new premise change their convictions. David F. Swenson described the leap in his 1916 article The Anti-Intellectualism of Kierkegaard using some of Kierkegaard's ideas.
The Vision and the Voice describes two additional methods of entering the Abyss. The first of these "concerns things of which it (was) unlawful to speak openly under penalty of the most dreadful punishment,"Confessions Chapter 66 namely receptive homosexual intercourse under the desert sun that went against Crowley's social habits of conduct or his conscious self-image.Sutin, p. 202. The second involves ceremonial magic and focuses more on the theory behind the Abyss.
Kleinostheim was most likely founded in the 6th century as Ossenheim by the Franks, and in 975, it had its first documentary mention. For almost a thousand years it was ecclesiastically and politically tightly bound with Saints Peter's and Alexander's Monastery in Aschaffenburg. On 21 January 1945, the community suffered the most dreadful day in its history. In an air raid, more than 500 buildings were either damaged or utterly destroyed, and 61 people were killed.
Gielgud, who was a devoted friend of Leigh's, doubted whether Olivier was wise to let her play the demanding role of the mentally unstable heroine: "[Blanche] was so very like her, in a way. It must have been a most dreadful strain to do it night after night. She would be shaking and white and quite distraught at the end of it." The production company set up by Olivier took a lease on the St James's Theatre.
Seventy-eight of the 400 or so slaves on board died during the back-and-forth, which also severely debilitated the survivors. Denman later testified before parliament about this voyage, stating that he had “witnessed the most dreadful sufferings that human beings can endure.”Martinez (Sep-Oct 2007) On 26 December 1836 Commander the Honourable Joseph Denman commissioned the brig-sloop HMS Scylla for the Lisbon Station. He remained in command of her there until 17 November 1839.
For Truus, 1929 brought I Lost My Heart on a Bus, Jenny's Stroll Through Men and Gentlemen Among Themselves. Also in 1929, The Eccentric gave her the chance to work with one of Germany's comedy giants, Karl Valentin. A superb visual clown, Valentin made the most of his gangling frame, creating agonizing scenes where the most dreadful violence would happen - usually to himself. He wrote and produced many influential comedies, and was revered for transcending the uninspired slapstick that plagued German comedies.
You could > take every other sentence out without changing the sense a particle. Whole > department, in fact, often had no more substance than a "Talk [of the Town]" > anecdote. I guess he was one of the most dreadful writers who ever existed. Hotel des Artistes After being kicked out of the apartment he shared with The New Yorker founders Harold Ross and his wife Jane Grant, Woollcott moved first into the Hotel des Artistes on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, then to an apartment at the far end of East 52nd Street.
Among the injured was Cornelius Vanderbilt, who broke a leg and vowed never to travel by train again, although he later broke his vow and eventually became a railway magnate, owning the New York Central Railroad, among others. Another passenger was Congressman and former US President John Quincy Adams, who escaped injury, but described the accident in his diary as "the most dreadful catastrophe that ever my eyes beheld". Irish actor Tyrone Power was also aboard the train and recorded the accident in his two-volume journal Impressions of America.
Ritter's presence at the funeral of Husserl was widely interpreted at the time (and since) as an act of quiet courage and political protest against the Nazi regime.Friedländer, Saul Nazi Germany and the Jews, New York: Harper Collins, 1997 page 54. After the Kristallnacht pogrom, Ritter wrote in a letter to his mother: "What we have experienced over the last two weeks all over the country is the most shameful and most dreadful thing that has happened for a long time".Friedländer, Saul Nazi Germany and the Jews, New York: Harper Collins, 1997 page 297.
Prussia leads Europe, but has herself fallen into the > hands of foreigners, among whom I count the Kaiser and the Jews. For the > Bethmanns too are nothing, but internationalist chatterboxes."Röhl, John > 1914: Delusion or Design? Elek: London, 1973 page 58. In a letter of 21 March 1918 about the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, Eulenburg wrote: > "In whatever way we win, our victory must and will engender the most > dreadful hatred of us, so that, with our great-grandchildren in mind, we > must fashion frontiers which can provide a certain guarantee of safety in > the military as well as the economic sphere.
The fairly wide bell guaranteed a very high playing volume, and the instrument itself must have had a considerable dynamic range. The best surviving bell of a carnyx was found in North East Scotland as part of the so-called Deskford Carnyx and featured a movable tongue. In addition the bronze jaw of the animal head may have been loosened as well in order to produce a jarring sound that would surely have been most dreadful when combined with the sound of a few dozen more carnyces in battle.Steve Piggott: "The Carnyx in Early Iron Age Britain".
They released a six-track demo tape in August 1997, and a five-track EP titled All This Talk of Aliens in January 1998. Sanctus Real's full-length studio album Message for the Masses was released on June 18, 1999, and shortly afterward, bassist Matt Kollar was replaced by Steve Goodrum. Following Message for the Masses, which was recorded in a garage, the band made plans to record tracks at a major studio. To earn money for the endeavor, Hammitt and Goodrum took telemarketing jobs for a few months, which were difficult and described by Hammitt as "the most dreadful [jobs] ever".
Three days later, Kremer described the mass gassing of emaciated prisoners, nicknamed Musselmanner: :September 5, 1942: In the morning attended a special action from the women's concentration camp (Muslims); the most dreadful of horrors. Master-Sergeant Thilo (troop doctor) was right when he said to me that this is the anus mundi. In the evening towards 8:00 attended another special action from Holland [sic]. Because of the special rations they get a fifth of a liter of schnapps, 5 cigarettes, 100 g salami and bread, the men all clamor to take part in such actions.
Cancer: The most dreadful impact of NUMT insertion happens when the mtDNA is inserted into the regulatory region or nuclear structural genes and disrupts or alters the vital cell processes. For instance, in primary low-grade brain neoplasms, fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis helped with the recognition of mtDNA localized in the nucleus in correlation with an overall increase in mtDNA content in the cell. This ontogenically early event is important in the etiology of these tumors. Similarly, in hepatoma cells mtDNA sequences are present in the nuclear genome at a higher copy number in contrast with the normal tissues.
To the above may readily be compared Gmelin's mistaking a drop of water for a mighty ocean and He pictures continually to himself the cruellest and most dreadful imaginings of an inevitable death awaiting him. The phenomenon, described in similar terms by Gmelin and Krasheninnikov in their respective accounts, is that of macropsia - whereby small objects are perceived as being enormous - a symptom of (among other conditions, both natural and self- inflicted) the use of psychoactive drugsUnnithan SB, Cutting JC. The cocaine experience: Refuting the concept of a model psychosis? Psychopathol 1992; 25: 71-78. (see also dysmetropsia).
On numerous occasions, in print and in person, Gibbs expressed an intense dislike for Woollcott as both an author and as a person. In a letter to James Thurber, in fact, Gibbs wrote that he thought Woollcott was "one of the most dreadful writers who ever existed." Thomas Kunkel asserts in his biography of New Yorker founder Harold Ross, "Genius in Disguise," that a profile of Alexander Woollcott written by Gibbs sparked the disassociation of Woollcott and the magazine. For many years, Gibbs was also the editor and publisher of The Fire Islander a weekly newspaper on Fire Island, where he had a vacation home.
The Cook family monument is situated in the chancel of St Andrew the Great, Cambridge, where Elizabeth, and Hugh and James Cook, are buried. The monument reads as follows: > In Memory of CAPTAIN JAMES COOK, of the Royal Navy. One of the most > celebrated Navigators, that this or former Ages can boast of; who was killed > by the Natives of Owyhee, in the Pacific Ocean, on the 14th Day of February, > 1779: in the 51st Year of his Age. Of Mr. NATHANIEL COOK, who was lost with > the Thunderer Man of War. Captain Boyle Walsingham, in a most dreadful > Hurricane, in October, 1780: aged 16 Years.
The next day the arrests were publicly queried in the House of Commons, and a Labour backbencher Jack Jones started a debate on the subject in the afternoon. W. C. Bridgeman, the Home Secretary, said that he had directly ordered the police to arrest the ISDL members under the Restoration of Order in Ireland Act 1920, and that he had consulted the Attorney General who considered it perfectly legal. Hastings immediately stood and protested, saying that the Act was "one of the most dreadful things that has been done in the history of our country" and that the internments and deportations were effectively illegal.
Some caves open sadly > on the way. In place of the villages, kiosks and towers that hung on the > mountain's half-slope, one sees nothing any more but long charred walls, and > the huts of the Pasha's troops in the form of clay boats, moored at the feet > of the mountains. Once, I headed to the remains of a Byzantine church, where > I thought I saw collapsed marble; but it turned out that the porch and the > circuit were strewn with white skeletons. — Edgar Quinet > The day after we arrived, we went ashore, where the most dreadful spectacle > I had seen in my life awaited me.
It also ruled that since slaves were private property, their master was fully within his rights to reclaim runaways, even if they were in a state where slavery did not exist, on the grounds that the Fifth Amendment forbade Congress to deprive a citizen of his property without due process of law. Furthermore, the Supreme Court decided that the Missouri Compromise, which had been replaced a few years earlier by the Kansas-Nebraska Act, had always been unconstitutional and Congress had no authority to restrict slavery within a territory, regardless of its citizens' wishes.Paul Finkelman, "Scott v. Sandford: The Court’s Most Dreadful Case and How it Changed History," Chicago-Kent Law Review (2007) 82#3 pp3–48.
Charles had a crew of 70 men, who resisted with grapeshot and small arms fire, killing one seaman on Phoenix and wounding another; Jalouse had no casualties Still, the boats succeeded in taking Charles, where they found two English masters and 13 seamen who the privateers had taken out of vessels a few days previously. One of the vessels Charles had captured was David, Wilkinson, master, which had been sailing from Newfoundland to Waterford. Her captors sent Charles into Plymouth.Lloyd's List, n° 4430 - accessed 18 November 2015. On 3 November 1811 Jalouse departed Cork to join with the convoy that departed for Lisbon on the 27 October, after experiencing most dreadful weather.
While Stowe weaves other subthemes throughout her text, such as the moral authority of motherhood and the redeeming possibilities offered by Christianity, she emphasizes the connections between these and the horrors of slavery. Stowe sometimes changed the story's voice so she could give a "homily" on the destructive nature of slaveryDrawn With the Sword: Reflections on the American Civil War by James Munro McPherson, Oxford University Press, 1997, p. 30. (such as when a white woman on the steamboat carrying Tom further south states, "The most dreadful part of slavery, to my mind, is its outrages of feelings and affections—the separating of families, for example.").Uncle Tom's Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe, Vintage Books, Modern Library Edition, 1991, p. 150.
Former vaudevillian and radio star Fred Allen remarked, "The last time I saw him he was walking down Lover's Lane, holding his own hand." Actor Robert Wagner wrote that Fay was "...one of the most dreadful men in the history of show business. Fay was a drunk, an anti-Semite, and a wife-beater, and Barbara [Stanwyck] had had to endure all of that", while according to actor and comedian Milton Berle "Fay's friends could be counted on the missing arm of a one-armed man." Berle, who was Jewish, claimed to have once hit Fay in the face with a stage brace after Fay, on seeing Berle watching his act from offstage, called out, "Get that little Jew bastard out of the wings"..
Yohannan declared that the magazine would not review releases by major labels or their subsidiaries or those from "big indie labels that used to be known as 'punk' labels but are turning out the most dreadful rock imaginable." He further declared that "less and less emo, heavy metal, post- hardcore, and pop" would be reviewed owing to a tendency of those musical forms to adopt "all the egotistical self-indulgences of early '70s hard rock." This hardening of the publication's musical line was further emphasized in the following issue, dated February 1994, in which Yohannan responded at considerable length to the leading letter to the editor critical of the new review policy.Jeff H. to MRR and response by Tim Yohannan, "Letter A," Maximum Rocknroll no. 129 (February 1994), pp. 14-15.
Church of England bishops approached Booth about the time Church Army was founded to join in their work in the slums, but he declined. Both the Church Army and the Salvation Army continued to work in the most dreadful slums; both had some difficulty with their parent churches (Church of England and Methodist) being able to cope with those coming out of the slums as a result of the mission work, and realised the need for alcohol-free refuges. During the First World War, Church Army was very active among the troops in France, and ran around 2000 social clubs across France. In 1965 a new chapel, the Church Army Chapel, Blackheath and college designed by E.T. Spashett ARIBA, in Vanbrugh Park, Blackheath, London SE3 was opened by Princess Alexandra and consecrated by Michael Ramsey.
"At the first dawn of light, over at some rocky hills south-westward, where, during the night, we saw their camp fires, a direful moaning chant arose. It was wafted on the hot morning air across the valley, echoed again by the rocks and hills above us, and was the most dreadful sound I think I ever heard; it was no doubt a death-wail. From their camp up in the rocks, the chanters descended to the lower ground, and seemed to be performing a funereal march all round the central mass, as the last tones we heard were from behind the hills, where it first arose." A wax cylinder recording of the death wail of a Torres Strait Islander, made in 1898, exists in the Ethnographic Wax Cylinder collection maintained by the British Library.
He was accused by Macaulay of conspiring with Hastings to commit a judicial murder by having unjustly hanged Nandakumar; but the whole question of the trial of Nandakumar was examined in detail by Sir James Fitzjames Stephen, who stated that "no man ever had, or could have, a fairer trial than Nuncomar, and Impey in particular behaved with absolute fairness and as much indulgence as was compatible with his duty." According to Macaulay, Impey later applied English law so aggressively as to "throw a great country into the most dreadful confusion", until in effect bribed by Hastings to desist. In 1790 Impey was returned to Parliament as the member for New Romney constituency and spent the next seven years as an MP before retiring to Newick Park near Brighton. He died there in 1809 and was buried in the family vault at St Paul's, Hammersmith, London.
He loved being with a small group of friends, and often climbed with friends, including many women, such as his sister Mina. He is said to have been very amiable, witty and fun-loving, as well as self-sacrificing in favor of his friends, one of whom, Walter Bing, reminiscing in his tribute to Preuss's life, wrote of him: Ach! One of the most dreadful characteristics of our beloved “Preusserl” was that he was inclined to crack the same lame old incredibly punchline-less joke ten times a day, and yet ten times a day we laughed at it and were gladdened by it.Messner, 1996, p. 260 On the fiftieth anniversary of Preuss's death Kurt Maix writes of him: His climbing partners – insofar as they are still living, they are old white-haired men – say of him: “He was a real rascal, a dear rascal.
Even the king, Charles II, was suspected of having instigated it, in order to punish the people of London for the execution of his father.Lauzanne (2001), Cercles Nationalism was high with Britain embroiled in the Second Anglo-Dutch War, and many foreigners—Dutch, French, Spanish, Irish—were suspect. Frenchmen were particularly vulnerable, as illustrated by the murder of a Frenchman whose tennis balls were mistaken for 'balls of fire'. Hubert, a foreigner and Frenchman, was a chief suspect, as suggested by the London Gazette: > [...] Strangers, Dutch and French were, during the fire, apprehended, upon > suspicion that they contributed mischievously to it, who are all imprisoned, > and Informations prepared to make a severe inquisition [...] Catholics were also chief suspects, and accusations were so formal as to be added to the Monument in 1668, which stayed (with brief interruptions) until 1830: > [...] the most dreadful Burning of this City; begun and carried on by the > treachery and malice of the Popish faction.
Extract from Westmeath Journal, 15 February 1827: :We have just heard that a most dreadful murder was committed last Sunday night, on the road between Ballymahon, and the town of Longford. It appears, that a young man named Thomas Needham, son to the Clerk of the Parish of Moydow, being on his way home, fell in company with some persons who were drinking in an unlicensed whiskey house, no quarrel whatever seems to have occurred there, but soon after leaving that place, the unfortunate Needham was murdered in the most barbarous manner – his skull was beaten all to pieces with stones, his eyes knocked into his head, and his face altogether so contused, as to render it quite frightful to behold. The body was dragged through hedges and ditches nearly half a mile, and then deposited in a boghole, where it was found next day nearly naked. Needham was robbed of clothes and money, as well as deprived of life.
He pictures > continually to himself the cruellest and most dreadful imaginings of an > inevitable death awaiting him, and, as it seems, all this fills him with > despair, because his senses are withering away; thus, should one such > drunkard go to step over a beam, he will take a great stride out of all > proportion to the actual size of it, while another will see deep water in > front of him [ where there is only shallow ] such that he dare not venture > into it. In conclusion, Gmelin then adds, concerning the plant itself : > The local inhabitants often use these roots when they want to play a prank > upon each other. The Russian merchants often bring these roots back with > them when they return to Russia, because they maintain them to be a > sovereign remedy for bleeding haemorrhoids and also against the haematuria – > a claim which I have been unable to verify.Johann Georg Gmelin, Reise durch > Sibirien von dem Jahre 1738 bis zum ende 1740, Bd. 3 & 4, Vandenhoeck, > Göttingen, 1752.
Then to her true loves fathers she hastened with speed, When the news that she did hear most dreadful indeed, That her love had been dead some time they to her did unfold Which very near broke the heart of this female sailor bold. Some thousand miles she was from home from friends far away Alone she traveled seventy miles thro' woods in North America Bereft of all her kindred nor no parent to behold, In anguish she cried my true love did this female sailor bold. Then she went on board the Adelaide, to cross the troubled wave And in storms of hail and gales of wind she did all dangers brave She served as cook and steward in the Adelaide we are told Then sailed on board the Rover did the female sailor bold. From St Andrew's in America this fair maid did set sail, In a vessel called the Sarah and brav'd many a stormy gale She did her duty like a man did reef and steer we're told By the captain she was respected well—the female sailor bold.

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