12 adverbs to describe how to demoralizes

In short, I emerged from that car ruined, wilted, and utterly demoralized.

I received numerous dinner invitations, as well as invitations to visit different places of amusement and interest; but as they came in so thick and fast, I soon became badly demoralized and confused.

In each case the system was copied from England at a time when city government in England was sadly demoralized.

He'll learn that a mysterious silence can demoralize the enemy quite as effectively as murderous cries.

The other lines are bringing a tremendous pressure to bear on Guilford, whose cut rates are demoralizing business frightfully.

Indeed overwork and ill-usage have upon children the markedly demoralizing effect of cowing them permanently, so that in oppressing a child you do more than deprive him of his childhood, you weaken what ought to be the backbone of his maturity.

The united testimony from all these sources is that beer is demoralizing, mentally, morally, and physically. 127.

"And so much of this dog-watch as isn't sickeningly demoralizing is deadly dull, as Crenshawe puts it.

Perhaps some dim recollection of former beatings at the hands of some severe master may also have temporarily demoralized the brute.

Their army was as naught; their long cessation of military operations by land having totally demoralized that once invincible branch of their forces.

We thus reach an Ireland which, in a sense, has neither culture nor language, a country in which the Gaelic spoken by a people humiliated and deeply demoralized by an anti-Catholic legislation, which was both savage and degrading, tended to coalesce with an English already condemned to death.

I will go beyond this, and say that religions have very frequently exercised a decidedly demoralizing influence.

12 adverbs to describe how to  demoralizes  - Adverbs for  demoralizes