Noun(1) a state of dishonor,offensive behavior,shame(2) a state of dishonor(3) offensive behavior(4) shame
Noun(1) a state of dishonor,offensive behavior,shame(2) a state of dishonor(3) offensive behavior(4) shame
(1) For a man who won the Open and then the US Open the following year to now suffer this ignominy is a disgrace to the game of golf.(2) If defaulters don't come forward, they will face charges and the public ignominy of being named.(3) The victims must know who heaped mountain upon mountain of injustice, ignominy and humiliation upon them.(4) That should be enough to pile ignominy upon him.(5) the ignominy of being imprisoned(6) All this ignominy heaped on us and we are still unrepentant?(7) On stage, he pulls knowing faces, as if his rise from boy-band ignominy to rock superstar is a joke in which audiences are complicit.(8) But he has gone quietly knowing that he will get a nice cushion of more than a million pounds compensation to soften any ignominy .(9) The final ignominy for United happened just a minute later.(10) But if you really must chew, a few ground rules should keep you this side of social ignominy .(11) I'll wait for the post-election post-mortem and watch some pollster shrivel away in ignominy .(12) It can be fully present in failure, disgrace and ignominy .(13) Imagine the shame, the ignominy , the dire social consequences.(14) The greatest ignominy of that afternoon was when Mayo brought their sub-goalkeeper on as a forward for the closing five minutes.(15) It's a battle of dignity against ignominy , a battle for the rights of the peoples of Venezuela and Latin America.(16) I am curious more about our women weightlifters returning from Athens in shame and ignominy .