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If they proved false, those who made them would be disgraced.
An American citizen who did that would be disgraced and, if he was a soldier, tried and imprisoned.
(What a swindle that was. Mr. Cardiff contends he was deprived even of a nomination because his American colleagues felt they would be disgraced if a foreigner were to win twice in a row).
In an editorial some weeks before the election, the "Times" asserted that if the election had only one candidate the U.S. would be disgraced & her sons would have died in vain.
The village chief was shocked: if the petitioner were to appear in Tiananmen Square at such a prominent moment, not only would the chief lose his job, but his immediate superiors — the township and county chiefs — would be disgraced as well.
If several people who are not saved know some dirt on the prospective leader, their reputation could be quickly ruined, and the leader, and the church, would be disgraced.
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If they lost they would be disgracing their grandparents.
I feel like I would be disgracing him if I did that.
Long before the trial, when lawyers for Sotheby's, prompted by the federal investigation, questioned her about any collusion, of course she denied it, Mr. Greene argued, adding: "She'd be disgraced.
It would be disgrace if the full account of the Co-op Bank's horrors takes as long to appear as the postmortem on HBOS.
For example, if it had been discovered that Hillary Clinton had "borrowed" one-fourth of her new book, she would likely be disgraced so badly she wouldn't even run for president.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com