Cabarrus, a French speculator, formerly much encouraged by the Spanish government, afterwards disgracedand imprisoned, but now liberated) might not be the only means employed to procure his conversion.
Kutochikine (seventeenth century), who was minister in his own land, then disgraced and exiled in Sweden, wrote an extremely interesting book on the habits of his contemporaries.
I proceeded: "When he wasdisgraced she did not come near him.
They disgraced Hector in New Caledonia," she said, "because he refused to punish a convict at Ile Nou who did not deserve it.
But he wanted no life that was disgraced in the sight of his own soul.
I should be disgraced for ever in the eyes of myself and of my people.
He was pleased with her fresh young prettiness, which was not disgraced even by Antonia's imperial charms.
Dom Joseph died in 1777, and Pombal was at once disgraced and his enemies released, the pious Queen Maria and her Ministers subjecting him to persecution for some years.
Whatever he touched was disgraced by the vileness of his heart and the Satanic daring of his mind" (History of Rationalism, ed.
Their desertion of Nero was indeed justified by his crimes; but they could not accuse Galba of having murdered his mother or his wife; nor could they allege that he had everdisgraced the purple by appearing on the stage.
Count Podstadsky, through his frauds, has ruined thousands of my subjects; Baron von Szekuly has stolen sixty thousand florins, and both these men have disgraced their births and titles.
It means that I have found here seven men of noble birth, who have disgraced their caste by fattening upon the misery of their fellows.
It is called, 'The Disgraced Favorite, or the Whims of Fortune.
Every man of them has curried favor with that shameless woman whose presence has defiled the throne of my ancestors, and disgraced the declining years of my grandfather.
I loved him when he was little better than the Fool of the Court of Pesaro, and not even the shame of the motley that disgraced him could stay the impulse of my affections.
Would not my whole life thereafter be disgraced by suspicions?
You mean to live on with this thought in your heart, that the man whom you love is innocent, and nevertheless, disgraced forever, and cut off from human society.
Some say that since we began the war for humanity, we are disgraced by coming out of it with increased territory.
Are we not morally culpable and disgraced before the civilized world if we leave it as bad or worse?
No; it is you that have disgraced me and put me to shame before everybody,--for nothing, for nothing.
Don't you know that he disgraced his order, and that the woman was unfit to bear the name which rightly or wrongly she had assumed?
Over and over again he spoke of Mary as though she had disgraced herself utterly; and when Lord George defended his wife, the lord only smiled and sneered.
The treatment which the Marquis received at Rudham did not certainly imply any feeling that he had disgracedhimself by what he had done either at Manor Cross or up in London.
I should have thought that not one of you would have spoken to George after he had disgraced himself by such a marriage.
And yet he was surly to her simply because his brother had disgraced himself!
Do you think he will see me disgraced before a room full of people, as you did yesterday, and hold his tongue?
But then he was quite as strongly opposed to that other idea of sending her back to her father, as a man might send a wife who had disgraced herself.
He would stand by her; he would be good to her; but her husband by his own doing had wilfully disgraced her.
Dreadful is the example of ruined innocence and virtue, and the completest triumph of the completest villany that ever vexed and disgraced mankind!
The debater obtained credit, but the statesman was disgraced forever.
Was his priestly office disgraced by carelessness or drunkenness or impurity of life?
Clement V was one of the worst of those miserable men who have from time to time disgraced the papal chair, and was guilty of almost every crime.
If the whole thing were ever found out I should be disgraced for life!
But, save her from this disgrace, and she shall never be disgracedby us.
Am I to be skivered like a rabbit before your eyes, and to have my name disgraced for ever in the sight of all my tribe, and me the best man among them?
I'll be disgraced for ever this evening, when the king calls for his story-teller.
And yet the world would proclaim him moral, as well as wise, and the pleasing converse every way of his disgraced cousin Austin.
A fearful conspiratorial frown, that would not have disgraced Guido Fawkes, was darted back from the, plastic features of Master Ripton.
The man was beside himself with mortification, with disgust, and fury, and at the same time with a savage natural affection for the creature who had baffled and disgraced him, yet still was his own.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "disgraced" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word. Other words: discredited; embarrassed; shamed