A pair of climbers were benighted in a storm at the top of Royal Arches without overnight gear. |
|
Seen in this benighted context, the election is as inexplicable as it is marvellous. |
|
These are numbers that would have done honor to the state in its darkest, most benighted hour. |
|
Now what was meant, of course, in fairness to the benighted author, is that educated people are statistically disproportionately liberal. |
|
It is a sophisticated political response to a techno-scientific culture he viewed as primitive, destructive, benighted. |
|
It would certainly confirm the country's international reputation as a backward and benighted land. |
|
This naturally entails a missionary element, bringing new revelations to the benighted souls in the art-complacent Antipodes. |
|
We poor benighted left-handers, however, require tender, therapeutic care to deal with our differentness. |
|
Until those central elements of decency and prosperity exist, our nation should help shelter political refugees from this benighted place. |
|
I was a prime example, a fledgling member, of the brotherhood of benighted working class cannon fodder the US is so famous for. |
|
The forest was also frequented by outlaws, and was a place of great danger to the benighted traveller. |
|
Protagonists are helpless and feeble, benighted, physically weak and powerless. |
|
It seems that our benighted law-makers do not see anything questionable about this. |
|
As he grew older, this cussedness became more pronounced, until his hatred of benighted autocratic states led him in the eyes of many to betray his left-wing views altogether. |
|
But isn't it surprising there have not been more deaths in that benighted land where people seem to have nothing else to do but take potshots at our boys. |
|
Now, I happen to be one of those benighted people who still smoke, so I can light my candle. |
|
To the extent that it is still a significant ideology, it is portrayed as something that exists only in foreign benighted places. |
|
As does the structural racism which benighted our immigration for so many years. |
|
Feebly gleaming in the distance, the flickering butter lamp shone as a beacon of hope to the benighted traveller. |
|
It is the benighted natives who are the aggressors, resorting to violence against their benefactors. |
|
|
He practices directing as antithetically and abusively to the author's intentions as perversely possible, reaping kudos from benighted reviewers and audiences alike. |
|
If a local prince proved benighted, his subjects high-tailed it to the next duchy. |
|
Indeed, there's reason to hope that even the most benighted moral equivocators may come to realize that the message is the exact opposite of the one they've been preaching. |
|
And viciously contemning the Church more often than not entails a disdainful sidelong glance at the benighted faithful who persist in allegiance to her. |
|
Last week, I took it upon myself to introduce you benighted savages to one of the great comedies of modern times. |
|
I knew immediately where to locate my benighted family and growing restlessness. |
|
In 1975 he went from benighted Warsaw to far more benighted Luanda to cover the civil war in Angola. |
|
That would pretty much set the stage for a generations-long clash of civilizations, with my beloved, sometimes benighted country as the aggressor. |
|
It's a primitive, benighted method of ordering life that is based mostly on coercion and the world would be much better off if all its forms were banned forever. |
|
The people of Florence are far from considering themselves ignorant and benighted, and yet Brother Savonarola succeeded in persuading them that he held converse with God. |
|
All of this nonsense that the Democratic National Committee affiliates are promoting is typical of the sheer gutlessness of that benighted party. |
|
The benighted Chechens were not the only victims of the amorality. |
|
The monkish scholars of the Dark Ages and the universities of the Middle Ages are reminders that the rushlight of learning flickered even in the most benighted periods. |
|
I was too much for the benighted herrenvolk of Brandfort, the children of Hendrik Verwoerd. |
|
It is clear that a group of people have hijacked the European project, and I am, regrettably, convinced that those who acquiesce once again will go down in history as benighted squanderers. |
|
The spread of peace to some of the world's more benighted countries may happen not because leaders parley or Western troops leave, but because the element of wickedness has been taken out of their cars. |
|
In 2014, Missouri showed itself, and the nation, at its most benighted. |
|
It's the time of year when balikbayans descend upon us in droves Ito remind us of how benighted we are. |
|
Outsiders may well wonder whether it is worth persevering with their efforts to bring peace and prosperity to the benighted Balkans when, despite their best efforts, so many people there seem determined to kill each other. |
|
In other words, bishops in the southern hemisphere should stop taking traditionalist parishes or dioceses under their wing and consecrating new bishops for benighted, liberal lands. |
|
|
Many Americans would like the withdrawal of combat troops from Iraq to signal the beginning of the end of America's overall embroilment in the benighted regions of the world. |
|
With the zeal of a convert, she set out to share the secrets of her newfound well-being with other benighted sufferers in need of detox, as she saw it, from the poisons that accumulate during a stressed life of unmindfulness. |
|
The act is designed to remove hate messages that cross the line from being expressions of opinion, even if benighted opinion, to that danger zone where they create true dangers for groups of Canadians. |
|
We thought an alcoholic was a low life, someone on metho, or a benighted person who drank a bottle of gin before breakfast. Not us. |
|