We believe that every family deserves to have a mannerly pet, a dog that doesn't jump up, pull on the leash or embarrass them out in public. |
|
The protest was staged as a deliberate attempt to embarrass the government. |
|
If I got behind the wheel of a race car, I'd only hurt or embarrass myself, so I never had a real desire to do it. |
|
His first object was to try to embarrass the wreckers into keeping their gobs shut. |
|
I would have fallen on my knees and make a scene just to embarrass him, but it would have made me look like a complete idiot. |
|
When rosacea reddens your face, it can also embarrass you professionally. |
|
The mass dump suggests that whoever did this, their primary motivation was to embarrass Sony Pictures. |
|
Deliver the essentials of municipal government, do not embarrass the city, keep your nose clean and we will re-elect you until the cows come home. |
|
After almost five months without a solution, the lack of initiative is starting to embarrass the Lebanese government. |
|
Now, Tiger is selfishly willing to embarrass his dead father to rescue his reputation. |
|
Silkwood was tarred as a discontented employee who contaminated herself to embarrass the company she worked for. |
|
Gregory gave off a very watery smile, and tried not to embarrass himself. |
|
Napoleon learnt of that affair and a letter he wrote about it was intercepted by the British and published widely, to embarrass Napoleon. |
|
These normally try to embarrass the government and are widely covered in the media. |
|
Then they decide that such a court-martial would embarrass them. |
|
Those men served creditably, and it would be unjust and disgraceful to embarrass them in this way. |
|
There was nothing of disorganization, nothing of procrastination, nothing evincive of a temper to embarrass or obstruct the public business. |
|
This was instigated by his enemies in an attempt to embarrass the Poet Laureate and highlight his apostasy from radical poet to supporter of the Tory establishment. |
|
Historians speculate that Smith was trying to embarrass northern Democrats who opposed civil rights for women because the clause was opposed by labor unions. |
|
He went so far as to change substantive policy decisions after they had been leaked to the press in order to undermine the leaker and embarrass the leakee. |
|
|
The president and her advisers seem convinced that by keeping the issue of the Falklands in the public eye she can embarrass London into eventual negotiations. |
|
He provided substantial evidence to suggest that she planned the event to embarrass her husband, never anticipating the resulting escalated melodrama. |
|
Her father's sad passing makes such memories deeply poignant, but Meadows relays them too chirpily for me to embarrass myself by getting moist-eyed. |
|
His Terminators I and II were adrenaline-fuelled thoroughbreds, and T3 gave Arnold Schwarzenegger an action thriller farewell which didn't embarrass his brilliant legacy. |
|
This is the perfect joke present, offering random grininducing statements that poke fun at back-seat drivers and possibly embarrass them into silence. |
|