Use "desertion" in a sentence

1. Although the wife was in desertion, nevertheless it must be remembered that desertion is never irrevocable.

2. Is desertion grounds for divorce?

3. Conscientious objection, absence without leave and desertion

4. Some have been shot for desertion.

5. He was court-martialled for desertion.

6. Desertion is a ground for divorce.

7. She felt betrayed by her husband's desertion.

8. 21, on the ground of Causeless desertion

9. Desertion from the army is punishable by death.

10. His desertion from the army brought dishonor on his family.

11. A silence of desertion was in the front.

12. During the war, desertion was punishable by death.

13. He took his son's desertion as a personal Affront

14. Her right to maintenance was not lost by desertion.

15. He took his son's desertion as a personal affront.

16. The desertion rate was the highest in the world.

17. The officer was convicted of desertion at a court martial.

18. Millions are disengaged from their children through divorce or desertion.

19. ‘he took his son's desertion as a personal Affront’

20. After two years he divorced his wife for desertion.

21. 6 The officer was convicted of desertion at a court martial.

22. The high rate of desertion has added to the army's woes.

23. Desertion Your wife has left you for a continuous period of two years.

24. Mutiny and insubordination, desertion, and fraudulent enlistment and absence without leave;

25. He was shot for desertion in the face of the enemy.

26. The noun has the sense of “desertion, abandonment, or rebellion.”

27. 13 He took his son's desertion as a personal affront.

28. Mrs. Snavely got a divorce on the grounds of desertion.

29. The Directory discussed Bonaparte's "desertion" but was too weak to punish him.

30. Maltreatment and desertion of one family member by another shall be prohibited.

31. a) Mutiny and insubordination, desertion, and fraudulent enlistment and absence without leave

32. 18 synonyms for Apostasy: desertion, defection, treachery, heresy, disloyalty, backsliding, perfidy

33. Abandonment or desertion are fault grounds for divorce, so if you live in a pure no-fault state, you can’t use your spouse’s desertion as a reason for the divorce

34. Gnaeus Scipio had lost the advantage of numbers with the desertion of the mercenaries.

35. Such apparently obvious explanations for the desertion of a settlement are, however, too simplistic.

36. Legal Definition: Spousal Desertion – Criminal Abandonment “ Marital desertion (Abandonment) refers to a situation in which one spouse severs ties with the family, forsaking his or her responsibilities and duties to the family

37. Synonyms for Apostasies include defection, disloyalty, faithlessness, perfidy, treachery, desertion, heresy, backslidings, betrayal and recantations

38. Ramaphosa's own transformation into a tycoon has disappointed some blacks, who accuse him of desertion.

39. The Bitterer because to the injury of his desertion he adds the offense of ingratitude

40. There are other key differences between the terms Awol and desertion, which can be easy to confuse

41. Perhaps because I said that even if I returned I should now be shot for desertion.

42. The fear of punishment for conscientious objection, absence without leave or desertion is investigated on an individual basis

43. Apart from desertion the other force which continually sapped and depleted the strength of every navy was disease.

44. The fear of punishment for conscientious objection, absence without leave or desertion is investigated on an individual basis.

45. Mackay fell back on Stirling, having lost three-quarters of his men on the battlefield or through desertion.

46. After a certain period of time (30-day rule), the Awol status turns to a desertion status

47. When the initial grief of the desertion had passed she had known better than to mention her father's name.

48. The Comorian Criminal Code punishes exploitation of or sexual violence against minors (article 323), the abandonment of children, and desertion (articles 340-350).

49. Armies so non-national and drawn so largely from the lowest strata of the social pyramid were prone to lose men by desertion.

50. Abjectness abominability abominableness Arrantness atrociousness awfulness badness beastliness beggarliness bestiality brutality chicanery coarseness commonness commonplaceness contemptibility contemptibleness contrariety cravenness crudeness crumminess dastardliness debasement deficiency degradation depravity desertion under …

51. Since there is no provision for divorce in that country, these innocent victims of desertion have no way to end their married status and go forward with their lives.

52. Unauthorized absence from the military falls under three articles of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ): Article 85, Desertion; Article 86, Awol; and Article 87, Missing Movement

53. Casualty Statuses, Types, and Categories In the military, a Casualty is a person who is unable to serve in the line of duty due to death, injury, illness, capture, or desertion

54. Apostasy noun desertion, defection, treachery, heresy, disloyalty, backsliding, perfidy, unfaithfulness, falseness, faithlessness, recreance or recreancy (archaic) a charge of Apostasy Collins Thesaurus of the English Language – Complete and Unabridged 2nd Edition

55. As the Richmond–Petersburg Campaign (also known as the Siege of Petersburg) ended, Lee's army was outnumbered and exhausted from a winter of trench warfare over an approximately 40 mi (64 km) front, numerous battles, disease, hunger and desertion.

56. Losses of eggs or chicks through desertion, storms, interference from other albatrosses, accidental egg puncturing, disease, parasites and the rolling of eggs from nests are potential, but unquantified, sources of mortality (Hasegawa and DeGange 1982).

57. In a retaliatory measure designed to stop further desertion to the enemy, Adoni-zedek united his army with those of four additional kings of the Amorites, and he laid siege against Gibeon and warred against it.

58. Apostasy (apo, from, and stasis, station, standing, or position).The word itself in its etymological sense, signifies the desertion of a post, the giving up of a state of life; he who voluntarily embraces a definite state of life cannot leave it, therefore, without becoming an Apostate.

59. Apostate (n.) mid-14c., "one who forsakes his religion or faith," from Old French apostat and directly from Late Latin Apostata (which form also was used in English), from Greek apostasia, apostasis "defection, desertion, rebellion," from apostanai "to defect," literally "to stand off," from apo "off, away from" (see apo-) + stanai, aorist of histanai "to set, place," literally "cause to stand

60. Apostate (n.) mid-14c., "one who forsakes his religion or faith," from Old French apostat and directly from Late Latin apostata (which form also was used in English), from Greek apostasia, apostasis "defection, desertion, rebellion," from apostanai "to defect," literally "to stand off," from apo "off, away from" (see apo-) + stanai, aorist of histanai "to set, place," literally "cause to stand