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Shameful   /ʃˈeɪmfəl/   Listen
Shameful

adjective
1.
(used of conduct or character) deserving or bringing disgrace or shame.  Synonyms: black, disgraceful, ignominious, inglorious, opprobrious.  "An ignominious retreat" , "Inglorious defeat" , "An opprobrious monument to human greed" , "A shameful display of cowardice"
2.
Giving offense to moral sensibilities and injurious to reputation.  Synonyms: disgraceful, scandalous, shocking.  "The wicked rascally shameful conduct of the bankrupt" , "The most shocking book of its time"



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"Shameful" Quotes from Famous Books



... a rich man, and reunited to the son he drove into shameful exile. Well! we will see this confidential lawyer; and until then—until then—why, we are the schoolmistress of Red Gulch, and responsible for its youthful ...
— Two Men of Sandy Bar - A Drama • Bret Harte

... warning; nor did he speak of Inspector Val and his deductions as to Storri's visits to the Harley house. His only thought had been to cheer the drooping soul of Dorothy with the glad nearness of happier days. The word of comfort came in good time, for the shameful weight of the situation ...
— The President - A novel • Alfred Henry Lewis

... of it clings! I have lived out my time—I have prigged lots of verse—I have kissed (ah, that stings!) Lips that swore I had cribbed every line that I wrote on them—cribbed— honour bright! Then I loathed her; but now I forgive her; perhaps after all she was right. Yet I swear it was shameful—unwomanly, Bill, sir—to say that I fibbed. Why, the poems were mine, for I bought them in print. Cribbed? of course they were cribbed. Yet I wouldn't say, cribbed from the French—Lady Bathsheba thought it was vulgar— But picked up on the banks of the Don, from the ...
— The Heptalogia • Algernon Charles Swinburne

... nothing from us but what He Himself has sown in us. Hence this saying is to be understood as expressing either the shameful thought of the lazy servant, who deemed that he had received nothing from the other, or the fact that God expects from us the fruit of His gifts, which fruit is from Him and from us, although the gifts themselves are ...
— Summa Theologica, Part II-II (Secunda Secundae) • Thomas Aquinas

... in this affair we can afford to trust no one. Your daughter and yourself can remain quietly in the hotel, under an assumed name, for a few days, until she recovers her strength. Meanwhile, I have every expectation that the persons at the bottom of this shameful affair ...
— The Film of Fear • Arnold Fredericks


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