He led the conversation towards the notorieties of science; and he gave out his opinion of each of them, in insidious terms.
Do you really think that notorieties carry any weight with him?
Lord Ely and Lord James Hay and Lord Douro are here every Monday; and amongst our notorieties we have Napoleon, Bassano of Russian memory, the Russian Ambassador, the Man of the Treaty of Tilsit, and Jerome Buonaparte.
This is a season in which so many notorieties come through that I have dreaded being away.
Oh, we make a specialty of articles from notorieties over there; statesmen, scientific fellows, or people with titles.
Few of the Newgate notorieties of late years show any marked peculiarities; their crimes follow in the lines of others already found, and often more than once, in the calendars.
Some time ago I read the "Memoirs of Claude," who was the head of police in Paris during my time, and I was quite startled to find how many of the notorieties chronicled in his experiences had been known to me personally.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "notorieties" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.