Use "disreputable" in a sentence

1. He had a vaguely disreputable appearance.

2. That dive attracts every disreputable people.

3. What has Krogstad done that Torvald finds so disreputable?

4. I'm going to miss being disreputable.

5. Francs have a rich and disreputable past.

6. Don't go to the disreputable place of entertainment.

7. She spent the evening with her disreputable brother Stefan.

8. He looked disreputable in his gray three days beard.

9. Jack usually got his information from fairly disreputable sources.

10. Rag′Abash, a low fellow; Rag′amuffin, a low, disreputable person

11. It was Jack Trumper, one of the few disreputable acquaintances of his Cambridge days.

12. Bumming definition: a disreputable loafer or idler Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

13. Brominated vegetable oil is a semi-disreputable substance that in the U.S

14. Why else would I have chosen such a disreputable looking cretin?

15. I've been accused of using disreputable methods to get what I want.

16. By degrees the quality gave up going , and the fair, of course, became disreputable.

17. I don't consider a person to be disreputable just because he is a dissenter.

18. Hunted and disreputable cats recognized her at a glance as their refuge and champion.

19. Strolling back to the station I saw a man and woman leaving a disreputable hotel.

20. GHB Analogs also are distributed at disreputable stores that sell health food and nutritional supplements

21. They made an odd pair, she bony and remote, he heavy, grubby and vaguely disreputable.

22. He reputedly had to survive part of his early life by playing the violin in disreputable theatres.

23. Some disreputable agencies try to charge just for putting your name on their lists although this is illegal.

24. Major oil companies and other big corporate interests are also playing this game, and have financed disreputable PR campaigns against climate science.

25. He also had an inclination to attach himself, whether as ally or enemy, to dangerous and disreputable people.

26. This was a disreputable subterfuge, yet it appears that the same sort of procedure is enjoined by the new Act.

27. To transform a scholarly consensus into something that appears the obsession of a disreputable fringe group requires more than accidental bias.

28. But disreputable , illiterate and ignorant though he was, Fegelein seems to have been possessed of a simon-pure instinct for survival.

29. Maybe they too are rational rather than irrational, morally disreputable rather than organically abnormal,(sentence dictionary) overwhelmed by adversity rather than by wickedness.

30. After the disreputable Hanoverian kings, it was high time the monarchy became more respectable. That was the opinion of Queen Victoria and her husband, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.

31. 29 After the disreputable Hanoverian kings, it was high time the monarchy became more respectable. That was the opinion of Queen Victoria and her husband, Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha.

32. Along with a stipulation of entering treatment for drug abuse, he was required to "avoid persons or places of known disreputable or harmful character"; he refused to comply with both of these orders.

33. Abhorsen features Lirael, who is the recently revealed Abhorsen-in-Waiting; Prince Sameth, who is Lirael’s new-found nephew and descendant of the Wallmakers; Mogget, a bound servant of the Abhorsen line; and the Disreputable Dog.

34. There are many synonyms of Blackguardly which include Base, Contemptible, Crooked, Deceitful, Despicable, Devious, Discreditable, Disgraceful, Disreputable, Fraudulent, Ignoble, Ignominious, Infamous, Inglorious, Low, Miscreant, Offensive, Scandalous, Shabby, Shady, Treacherous, Unprincipled, Unscrupulous, Untrustworthy, Putrid, Unrespectable, etc.

35. Although foundation make-up was widely available and used within the film industry, the use of cosmetics, in general, was still somewhat disreputable, and no one had tried to market foundation (although lipstick, blush and nail polish were popular for daily use) as an everyday item.