Example sentences of "have be a [adj] disappointment " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | While I admire John Ebbrell as a true product of Everton 's youth policy , he really has been a terrible disappointment of late . |
2 | Despite helping Bath become one of the best club sides in the world , Barnes 's international career has been a miserable disappointment . |
3 | When I went in for medicine I had the feeling that maybe I would take out an appendix on the kitchen table … now this has been a big disappointment of my life as a GP that whatever I can do , there 's someone else who can do much , much better . |
4 | ‘ The winter sale has been a big disappointment . |
5 | Quite a few prominent people were to pay for that series defeat and it must have been a cruel disappointment for Mains that he was among those replaced . |
6 | It could have been a crushing disappointment for Tip Anderson , with the Championship staged over his home course ; instead it turned into a remarkable and spectacular success . |
7 | ( She also taught the social secretary to play the piano , but he was not an apt pupil and must have been a great disappointment to her . ) |
8 | It would have been a great disappointment if someone had n't taken Don 's place . |
9 | Nothing has gone right for Armiger or Tenby — remember him — and although Commander in Chief won two Derbys , the fact that Cecil 's more exposed two-year-olds failed to blossom must have been a great disappointment to him . |
10 | Nothing has gone right for Armiger or Tenby — remember him — and although Commander in Chief won two Derbys , the fact that Cecil 's more exposed two-year-olds failed to blossom must have been a great disappointment to him . |
11 | It would have been a sad disappointment to anyone ferreting in the top drawer of his desk . |
12 | I had gone so far that to blow it at that point would have been a big disappointment for me , ’ he said . |
13 | It must have been a considerable disappointment to the hon. Gentleman and his colleagues to hear Mr. Eric Bolton describe their proposals as ’ cloud cuckoo land ’ . |