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"rottenness" Definitions
  1. (informal) the fact of being very bad or dishonest
  2. the condition of being decayed and not fit to eat or use

38 Sentences With "rottenness"

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

He said the documents showed the "rottenness" within Moreno's family.
Just by Cox's reaction, it's like we can smell the rottenness from here.
Plant growth is à propos in taking a stand against a pervasive rottenness.
It exposed a pervasive rottenness under the surface of the country's infrastructure and governance.
When their failures echo the trifling rottenness and cruel unaccountability of the broader world, I react.
Coaching aside, it was also impossible to overlook the general rottenness of the on-field performances.
The Prinsloo case points to a broader problem: the rottenness of the South African Police Service (SAPS).
Valuably, Trump has exposed the rottenness of the consultant culture, and the squirrelly way politicians now talk to us.
The morning smelled of wet grass and something heavier, some tree in flower, a fecund smell that verged on rottenness.
The house's fundamental, supernatural rottenness comes across from the first minutes of the film, long before we know what's wrong with it.
In the Trump era it is easy, and definitely reductive, to see everything as either a product/reflection of or rebellion against a quintessential American rottenness.
What the report does not say, though — and what many Chicagoans themselves may not know — is that the rottenness is not confined to the Police Department.
An argument which claims that the National Football League should be a safe space for sports lovers, a way to get away from the rottenness of political discourse.
Hollow Knight has you exploring a dead world, walking through the ruins of a civilization brought low by pride and the inevitable rottenness at the heart of its universe.
Guston turns grotesque in the seven works from 1975, which portray Nixon's enflamed leg as a monstrous manifestation of his rottenness that he drags behind himself on a purgatorial beach.
Watching New Jersey Democrats (with tacit approval of national Democratic leadership) close ranks around him after he barely avoided a corruption conviction was already ample proof of New Jersey's rottenness.
I thought of all the old people I know who have been broken by the rottenness of their offspring who become thieves or addicts or just no-account losers and figured I'd carry my own groceries.
"Dogs" fuses the deadpan long takes characteristic of the Romanian new wave with a hint of early Coen Brothers humor, turning a rural crime story (including the discovery of a severed human foot) into a mordant and timely examination of the rottenness of power.
Mr Molefe's claims are striking not for the rottenness they reveal in a country where corruption has become endemic, but for the fact that they have been aired by a senior member of the ANC, which since its days as an underground movement has prized loyalty above all.
In "The Captive Mind," the book that first made Milosz's name known to Western readers, he emphasizes that he and most other Polish intellectuals thought that the Communists were right about many things: the injustice of feudal and capitalist Poland, the rottenness of Polish nationalism, the need to modernize society and politics.
The disease is most common in the developed world due to greater simple sugar consumption and less common in the developing world. Caries is Latin for "rottenness".
Naturalized from Latin into English (a loanword), caries in its English form originated as a mass noun that means "rottenness", that is, "decay". Cariesology or cariology is the study of dental caries.
Yet Pangemanann also recognises the rottenness of the colonial administration, and knows that his attempts to suppress the dissidents will be ultimately futile. He privately sympathises with the independence movement, and is tormented by pangs of conscience. Despite Pangemanann's inner turmoil and his secret admiration for Minke, he nonetheless engineers the journalist's destruction. Visiting Minke's grave, he mourns over his rival.
Israel, p. 997 This relatively innocuous invasion fully exposed the rottenness of the Dutch defenses, as if the French had driven a pen knife into a rotting windowsill. The consequences were spectacular. The Dutch population, still mindful of the French invasion in the Year of Disaster of 1672, went into a state of blind panic (though the actual situation was far from desperate as it had been in that year).
Fasad ( /fasād/) is an Arabic word meaning rottenness, corruption, or depravity. In an Islamic context it can refer to spreading corruption on Earth or spreading mischief in a Muslim land,Oliver Leaman (2013), Controversies in Contemporary Islam, Routledge, , Chapter 9 moral corruption against God,Oliver Leaman (2009), Islamic Philosophy, , pp. 140-141 or disturbance of the public peace.Muhammad in History, Thought, and Culture, Editors: Coeli Fitzpatrick and Adam Hani Walker, , p.
Typically botrytis infection begins to take place in late September and can last till late October. In some years desiccation may occur leaving tiny amount of sweet liquor like juice within the grape.K. MacNeil The Wine Bible pg 137 Workman Publishing 2001 The infection rate of botrytis is sporadic with vines and bunches achieving full rottenness at different times. This requires harvest workers to go through the vineyards several times between October and November to hand-pick the full rotted grapes.
Praising the novel in her review in The Independent, Ruth Padel wrote: "Lyric optimism from rottenness and violence: a brilliant - and beautiful - achievement."Ruth Padel, "Forbidden fruit of black on white: The longest memory - by Fred D'Aguiar"', The Independent, 23 July 1994. The review in Kirkus Reviews concluded: "A small book with the emotional impact of a wide-screen blockbuster, the reasoned progress of a play, and the painful beauty of poetry."The Longest Memory review, Kirkus, 20 May 2010.
Fifteen-year-old Alexandra Măceșanu went missing on 24 July while hitchhiking from her village Dobrosloveni to Caracal. She was kidnapped by the car's driver, 65-year-old mechanic Gheorghe Dincă, who raped and beat her. While in captivity in Dincă's house, Alexandra managed to call 112 three times, with a phone she found in the room. Alexandra's uncle, Alexandru Cumpănașu, released a written copy of her calls on his Facebook account, to show "the rottenness of a murderous system and the courage of this incredible child". The first call happened at 11:05 a.m.
The feud between Brownlow and Haynes continued through the early 1840s. Brownlow wrote that Haynes abounded in "hopeless rottenness," and accused him of cheating tenants out of corn and selling infected hogs to a North Carolina merchant,Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 20 August 1845. while Haynes dubbed Brownlow a "wretched abortion of sin" and a "tarnisher of female innocence."Jonesborough Whig and Independent Journal, 20 November 1844. In 1842, Haynes attempted to join the Methodist ministry, but was denied due in part to a series of charges levied against him in the Whig.
Laws calling for swingeing culls of "under-height" horses were partially repealed by Elizabeth I in 1566. Areas of poor quality land could not support the weight of horses desired by Henry VIII, and were exempted because of "their rottenness ... [They] are not able to breed beare and bring forth such great breeds of [stallions] as by the statute of 32 Henry VIII is expressed, without peril of miring and perishing of them". This allowed many of Britain's mountain and moorland pony breeds to escape slaughter."Wool is my bread... (Safety in the wilderness)" .
" Further, he notes that revealing at the end of the film that the She-Monster was actually a peaceful emissary doesn't work well within the narrative. "It adds nothing to the film and instead brings only into sharper relief all the rottenness of the picture, especially the hypocrisy of the filmmakers, which makes the movie seem far more distasteful than movies of the earlier '50s, including Phantom from Space, which is otherwise similar." Senn takes issue with the way the movie looks on-screen. "Throughout the film, Ashcroft's direction remains flat, as he rarely moves the camera and fails to utilize even moderately interesting angles or setups.
"Japanese Initiate New Propaganda Drive to Re-Establish US-Nippon Friendship," China Weekly Review, 30 July 1938, 274–277.Dillard Stokes, "Former Jap Consulate Secretary Tells District Court of Propaganda Scheme," The Washington Post, 20 May 1942, 5. In explaining the reason for his participation in the pro-neutrality movement, Townsend stated that while serving as a consul abroad he had "learned enough of the rottenness of international politics ... to wish to do my part of peace for this country."To Promote the Defense of the United States: Hearings Before The Committee On Foreign Relations United States Senate Part 1 (Washington DC: United States Government Printing Office, 1941), 795.
A sixth-order lens was used to display a fixed white light at a focal plane of thirty metres. Before work on constructing the lighthouse began, a short road was built to the nearest beach, and all the necessary material was landed there. In 1886, a bridge was built to access the "Downs," some grassland near the lighthouse, from the main road to Placentia. To access the lighthouse, a road along the beach that was subject to flooding and being obliterated by heavy seas had to be used, as some owners of the "Downs" objected to their property being crossed. When the Point Verde station was inspected in September 1880, the facing was peeling off the concrete foundation walls, revealing the rottenness within.
After the 13-day journey from the port of Jaffa "which had been one continued series of privations and disagreeable incidents of every kind", Forbin observed of Damietta, > The streets are narrow and unpaved, and the houses made of bricks, but the > whole are half destroyed. You cannot walk in the town, without being under > apprehensions of some worm-eaten post or projecting part of a building > falling on you: the whole surface is covered with dust and rottenness; the > mosques have lost their gates, and the minarets threaten to crush the > passenger with dilapidated and half broken down arches. They returned by the Nile to Cairo, where they disembarked in December 1818. Forbin provided a detailed illustration of Giovanni Belzoni's plans for penetration of the "second pyramid".
The vast huddle of sagging gambrel roofs and peaked gables > conveyed with offensive clearness the idea of wormy decay, and as we > approached along the now descending road I could see that many roofs had > wholly caved in. There were some large square Georgian houses, too, with > hipped roofs, cupolas, and railed "widow's walks". These were mostly well > back from the water, and one or two seemed to be in moderately sound > condition.... The decay was worst close to the waterfront, though in its > very midst I could spy the white belfry of a fairly well-preserved brick > structure which looked like a small factory. The harbour, long clogged with > sand, was enclosed by an ancient stone breakwater.... Here and there the > ruins of wharves jutted out from the shore to end in indeterminate > rottenness, those farthest south seeming the most decayed.
In the 4th Century some Jewish Christian groups maintained that Jesus was himself a vegetarian. Epiphanius quotes the Gospel of the Ebionites where Jesus has a confrontation with the high priest. Jesus chastises the leadership saying, "I am come to end the sacrifices and feasts of blood; and if ye cease not offering and eating of flesh and blood, the wrath of God shall not cease from you; even as it came to your fathers in the wilderness, who lusted for flesh, and did sate to their content, and were filled with rottenness, and the plague consumed them." According to Lightfoot, "the Christianized Essennes […] condemned the slaughter of victims on grounds very different from those alleged in the Epistle of Hebrews, not because they have been superseded by the Atonement, but because they are in their very nature repulsive to God; not because they have ceased to be right, but because they never were right from the beginning".
They believe that the season as they roll are but ministers of England's rapacity; that their starving children cannot sit down to their scanty meal but they see the harpy claw of England in their dish. They behold their own wretched food melting in rottenness off the face of the earth, and they see heavy-laden ships, freighted with the yellow corn their own hands have sown and reaped, spreading all sail for England; they see it and with every grain of that corn goes a heavy curse. Again the people believe—no matter whether truly or falsely—that if they should escape the hunger and the fever their lives are not safe from judges and juries. They do not look upon the law of the land as a terror to evil-doers, and a praise to those who do well; they scowl on it as an engine of foreign rule, ill-omened harbinger of doom.
The sleepers were widely spaced, with only four for each rail length; many were "in the last stages of rottenness". The track geometry near the point of derailment was very poor ("wavy" in Tyler's words).Wrottesley, volume I, page 218 > I find that this portion of railway, which had been for some 11 years in the > charge of the Great Eastern Company, was taken over, at the expiration of > the agreement under which it was worked, by the Great Northern Company, on > the 1st April last. I learn from the engineer of the Great Northern Railway > that he inspected it, with the engineer of the Great Eastern Company, in > December 1865, and that he then required that 11,400 new sleepers should be > inserted in the permanent way; but this not having been done, the same > number of new sleepers were handed over to the Great Northern Company, with > the line, in April. Out of 18 miles of double or 36 miles of single line > thus taken over, 11 miles have since been re-laid, with fished joints, and > sleepers 2 feet apart at the joints, and 2 feet inches apart in the > intermediate spaces; besides which, 5,000 new sleepers have been inserted by > the ordinary gangs.

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