70 adverbs to describe how to disappoint

The crowd of Boston enthusiasts, which had come to New York to see the finishing touches put on the Giants, was bitterly disappointed, while the New York enthusiasts, not over hopeful on account of the disposition of the Giants to blunder badly at vital moments, were at least in a much better frame of mind because of the rally by their team.

He is sadly disappointed and perhaps embittered or discouraged.

"You have at last found words to praise the exterior of Albany; and I hope, by the time we return, you will be disposed to see New-York with different eyes." "I expected to see a capital in New-York, Grace, and in this I have been grievously disappointed.

I was most agreeably disappointed in this respect.

Traders and merchants who were expecting the usual payments of cash annuities to the Indians, were sorely disappointed by finding a single tribe in the lake country paid in merchandise.

Bob and Betty, though keenly disappointed they were not to have his companionship, tried to accept the situation as cheerfully as he did.

" Ford felt dreadfully disappointed over the loss of his first crab, but the rapidity with which he caught the "knack of it" after that was a great credit to him.

He will be terribly disappointed if he doesn't see half a dozen ghosts.

As I lingered, deeply disappointed, the elderly proprietor of the pension, who superintended the comfort of his guests, trotted fussily up to enquire the stranger's business in his dining-room.

Here, however, they were happily disappointed, for they arrived at the pueblo of Oraibi, one of the prettiest villages on the mesa, on the eve of one of their characteristic snake dances, and decided to remain over night and see the performance.

I had been pleasantly disappointed almost every time that I entered a new country, but now, as I was entering Italy, I expected that I would surely not see much to interest me except her rich stores of art and the ancient ruins.

"One expects so little from one's self, that one is scarcely ever disappointed; and so much from other people, that nothing they can do comes up to one's expectations.

exclaimed Ivor, horribly disappointed at having done exactly the wrong thing, when he had tried so hard to do the right one.

" "Nooh, no," said Miss Sessions, startled, and considerably disappointed at the subject he had selected to converse upon.

"She'll be awfully disappointed if you don't go.

Most likely we should be bitterly disappointed; because, having formed our conception of him as the man who wrote HAMLET and OTHELLO we forget that these were not the preducts of his ordinary moods, but the manifestations of his power at white heat.

I must confess to having been wofully disappointed.

But you are assuredly disappointed at not being able to comprehend even the presentwhat is going on around you, under your eyes, deafening your ears.

" Both the girls were distinctly disappointed.

[Illustration: DUPONT, DELEGATE OF TRADE AND COMMERCE.] FOOTNOTES: [Footnote 77: The affair of the 30th of April signally disappointed the chiefs of the insurrection, who decreed the formation of a Committee of Public Safety, and caused Cluseret to disappear.

Hardinge dilates with delight upon his military preparations and plans of defence, and seemingly will be disappointed if he cannot put them into execution.

So she had asked him to come again a week later, naming the day, and she had been secretly disappointed because he did not protest against being put off so long.

So cruelly disappointed in a man whom all Paris deemed incorruptibly honest, de Gourville suspected nothing else from Mademoiselle de l'Enclos.

This expectation has not merely been disappointed.

Though Sandy is too kind-hearted to tell you, you have disappointed us both miserably, and there's the long and short of it.

70 adverbs to describe how to  disappoint  - Adverbs for  disappoint