Sentence examples for even more consternation from inspiring English sources

Exact(1)

In 2003 he memorably appeared to play russian roulette on live TV, and last year caused even more consternation by appearing to guess the winning lottery numbers.

Similar(59)

The British women crashed out of Wimbledon, causing even more Fleet Street consternation.

"The loss of a human life causes consternation, even more so when some of Mr Tendetza's relatives are workers with the company, to whom appropriate condolences were paid at his death.

With many college graduates already struggling with student loan debt at a time when the unemployment rate is hovering above 8percentthethe possibility that college would become even more expensive was cause for consternation among students and their parents.

This is very much what the 'happy land of Narnia' is about - it is a land of butter and cream, of plenty, made even more poignant because it was written during postwar hardship, when even potatoes (to Lewis's consternation) were rationed.

Beauty Behind The Madness is exciting because it finds the evidently troubled protagonist of The Weeknd's music teetering on the brink of a fame that can only make him go to even more interesting places, emotionally speaking, even if what he ends up doing there might cause consternation and doubt.

On the other hand, if Liverpool were strengthening its roster even more, enough to challenge for the league title — a prize that it hasn't won since 1989-90, thethe consternation of many fans — then Sterling and every other star in the club could become pivotal.

Johnson's domination has inspired more consternation than adulation from the fan base.

The source of more consternation all season, however, is the timing of that power.

Many, like those in Cincinnati, were Catholics, which for many native-born Protestants caused more consternation than the newcomers' ethnicities.

One story had him turning up to a policy session in baggy shorts and messily peeling a ripe orange, to the consternation of the besuited officials.Whitehall's Sir Humphreys (so-called after the Machiavellian civil-service boss in a long-running TV comedy, "Yes, Minister") were even more appalled by Mr Hilton's disruptive ideas for their future.

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