Definitionn. the state of being held in low esteem
Last update: August 14, 2015
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Some rowdies brought disrepute to our college. [Please select]
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Was an enthusiastic bowler, unfortunately encouraging by example wagering and playing for high stakes, habits that ultimately brought the green into as general disrepute as the alley. [Please select]
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After this the war-ballooning fell into disrepute. [Please select]
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Of course such things as these will ruin the boys, and bring the ship into disrepute. [Please select]
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Money, consequently, was in request, and all other commodities were in comparative disrepute. [Please select]
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It is certain that the enterprise of defining religion is at present in disrepute. [Please select]
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If you try to use cancelled stamps, you will fall into disrepute. [Please select]
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Women are in danger of disrepute if they find themselves dreaming of soldiers. [Please select]
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This has since fallen into disrepute in that country, but is sometimes practiced in other lands. [Please select]
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All professions which were not lucrative gradually fell into disrepute; and provided they were lucrative, it was of no consequence whether or not they were infamous. [Please select]
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There is no doubt that the passage which these lines introduce did much to bring the custom of settling personal quarrels by single combat into disrepute. [Please select]
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