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The phrase "about this disgrace" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a situation or event that is considered shameful or embarrassing.
Example: "The community held a meeting to talk about this disgrace and how to address the issues it raised."
Alternatives: "regarding this shame" or "concerning this scandal".
Exact(1)
I've written about this disgrace in my column: Congress, with the connivance of the White House, chopped out all $50 million in the present budget for the African Union peacekeepers, who are the only buffer in Darfur between the population and the killers.
Similar(59)
The me-me-me clamor brings to mind Emily Dickinson's poem about the disgrace of fame, "I'm Nobody!
That isn't to say that The Sun is wrong about the disgrace of the police cover-up.
The audience sees Roger Malcolm stab Barnette Hester, listens to gubernatorial candidate Eugene Talmadge froth at the mouth about the disgrace of black suffrage, and visits the victims' graves.
An immature youngster, Peter II fell under the influence of his chamberlain, Prince Ivan Alekseyevich Dolgoruky, whose family obtained a dominant position in the Supreme Privy Council and brought about the disgrace and exile of Menshikov.
Corbyn was at his best talking about the "disgrace" of 4 million people living in poverty, and his response to May's jibe about Labour borrowing was a good one.
Viewed thus, British costume dramas about the disgrace of the Raj function as pretexts for the pleasures of fixating on the opposite – the cross-cultural slap and tickle, the spices, saris and sahibs and all the rest of the costume drama dross of Anglo-Indian history.
I had been working on health care reform, and I went to Kennedy and vented about the disgrace that I saw: over 25 million Americans without health insurance.
Someone must have noticed, however, that of all those films, only three have been about women ("Unmatched," about Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova Marion Joneses: Press Pause," about the disgraced track-and-field star; and "Renée," about the transsexual tennis player Renée Richards).
The documentaries include "Enron: Rise and Fall," about the disgraced Texas company, and "Shakespeare Behind Bars," about actor inmates in a Kentucky prison.
I sat down on another unimposing chair and asked her about her book, the first she has written on her own (she wrote an earlier one about the disgraced Washington judge, Clarence Thomas, with her friend Jane Mayer).
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com