Sentence examples for the disaffection from inspiring English sources

Dictionary

the disaffection

noun

Discontent; unrest.

  • His disaffection with all Microsoft products, while justified, was alarming.

Exact(12)

He blames the disaffection squarely on them.

Whatever it takes to add to the disaffection.

It's too soon to tell whether Apple can shake off the disaffection of investors.

Prostitution is widespread.Will the disaffection of the young bring down the regime?

There is no mystery in the disaffection of the Arsenal fans.

The disaffection of all these elements easily turned into opposition to Philip V as king.

The Tories managed to capitalise on the disaffection of farmers and anglophiles to capture Monmouth.

Mostly, I think we exaggerate the disaffection of Chinese toward their government.

Events in Charlotte may help demonstrate how widespread the disaffection is among the party grassroots.

Seeing an opportunity in the disaffection, politicians who had been sidelined by the government started developing relationships with rural residents.

The results are in this week's Politics issue, in "The Hardest Vote: The Disaffection of Ohio's Working Class".

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