Matches in Wiktionary for { ?s <http://wiktionary.dbpedia.org/terms/hasExample> ?o. }
- disadvantage-English-Noun-1en hasExample "The disadvantage to owning a food processor is that you have to store it somewhere.".
- disadvantage-English-Noun-2en hasExample "My height is a disadvantage for reaching high shelves.".
- disadvantage-English-Verb-1en hasExample "They fear it might disadvantage honest participants to allow automated entries.".
- disaffection-English-Noun-1en hasExample "His disaffection with all Microsoft products, while justified, was alarming.".
- disaffirmance-English-Noun-2en hasExample "disaffirmance of judgement".
- disagree-English-Verb-2en hasExample "My results consistently disagree with yours!".
- disagree-English-Verb-3en hasExample "That burrito disagreed with me.".
- disagree_with-English-Verb-1en hasExample "The sausage I bought at the market is disagreeing with me.".
- disagreeable-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "Preach you truly the doctrine which you have received, and teach nothing that is disagreeable thereunto. --Udall.".
- disagreeable-English-Adjective-2en hasExample "That which is disagreeable to one is many times agreeable to another, or disagreeable in a less degree. --Wollaston.".
- disagreement-English-Noun-1en hasExample "They had a bit of a disagreement about what color to paint the bedroom, but they have reached a compromise.".
- disagreement-English-Noun-2en hasExample "The theory shows considerable disagreement with the data.".
- disallow-English-Verb-1en hasExample "The prisoners were disallowed to contact with a lawyer.".
- disallow-English-Verb-2en hasExample "The goal was disallowed because the player was offside.".
- disambiguation-English-Noun-1en hasExample "The lexical disambiguation relies on looking ahead to identify possible senses.".
- disapparate-English-Verb-1en hasExample "... the simplest thing John Prescott could do, to help secure a fourth term for Labour, would be to disapparate, taking his fellow revenants with him. ( - The Observer)".
- disappointing-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "disappointing results".
- disappointment-English-Noun-1en hasExample "Choking back his disappointment after his own team's splendid wins against Liverpool and Aston Villa, he said: \"I've got to be humble and say we were beaten by a very good side.\" 177698 Today, News Group Newspapers Ltd, 1992".
- disassemble-English-Verb-1en hasExample "To perform the repair it was necessary to disassemble most of the mechanism.".
- disassimilative-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "Disassimilative processes constitute a marked feature in the life of animal cells. 656569 McKendrick.".
- disassociate-English-Verb-1en hasExample "After the scandal, the political party disassociated itself from the questionable candidate.".
- disassociate-English-Verb-2en hasExample "The problem is easier to understand if you disassociate the variables.".
- disassociate-English-Verb-3en hasExample "The fabric of the coat disassociated when I washed it.".
- disaster_area-English-Noun-1en hasExample "Much of the central Gulf Coast was declared a disaster area after hurricane Katrina.".
- disaster_area-English-Noun-2en hasExample "Your room is a disaster area.".
- disavow-English-Verb-1en hasExample "He was charged with embezzlement, but he disavows the crime.".
- disavow-English-Verb-2en hasExample "Because of her dissatisfaction, she now disavows the merits of socialism.".
- disband-English-Verb-1en hasExample "The president wanted to disband the scandal-plagued agency.".
- disbelief-English-Noun-1en hasExample "She cried out in disbelief on hearing that terrorists had crashed an airplane into the World Trade Center in New York City.".
- disbelief-English-Noun-2en hasExample "I stared in disbelief at the Grand Canyon.".
- disbelieve-English-Verb-2en hasExample "He chose to disbelieve the bad news as inconceivable.".
- disc-English-Noun-1en hasExample "A coin is a disc of metal.".
- disc-English-Noun-3en hasExample "Venus's disc cut off light from the Sun.".
- disc-English-Noun-4en hasExample "Turn the disc over, after it has finished.".
- disceptation-English-Noun-1en hasExample "Verbose janglings and endless disceptations. 656761 Strype.".
- discernable-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "There was a discernable performance difference between a porsche and a civic.".
- disciplinarian-English-Noun-1en hasExample "He is the chief disciplinarian in the school.".
- disciplinary-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "Debt can motivate or act as a disciplinary force for executives to achieve organizational efficiency.".
- disciplinary-English-Adjective-2en hasExample "The school has announced that it will take disciplinary measures against the students who participated in the protest activities.".
- disciplinary-English-Adjective-3en hasExample "We hope that psychologists will applaud good studies of scientific behavior and thought regardless of the disciplinary specialty of the author.".
- disclude-English-Verb-2en hasExample "Please disclude me from further discussions on this topic.".
- discombobulated-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "After months of preparation for a new sign ordinance, the Planning Commission appeared discombobulated over the idea of adopting the new regulations when confronted by a few members of the public.".
- discomfortable-English-Adjective-2en hasExample "A labyrinth of little discomfortable garrets. 656995 Thackeray.".
- disconcerting-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "Even with a safety harness, losing one's grip that high up is disconcerting.".
- disconnect-English-Noun-3en hasExample "There's a disconnect between what they think is happening and what is really going.".
- disconnectable-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "a disconnectable cable".
- disconnected-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "There's no use trying to make a call on the disconnected phone.".
- disconnected-English-Adjective-2en hasExample "I just feel so disconnected from people living on the other side of the world.".
- disconnection-English-Noun-1en hasExample "The disconnection of the power cable shut down all the computers.".
- disconnection-English-Noun-2en hasExample "A sudden disconnection cut me off in mid-phrase.".
- disconnection-English-Noun-3en hasExample "There was a hopeless disconnection between the weary, old teacher and the spirited, young students.".
- disconsolate-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "I opened my eyes to this disconsolate day.".
- disconsolate-English-Adjective-2en hasExample "For weeks after the death of her cat she was disconsolate.".
- disconsolateness-English-Noun-1en hasExample "Each day's disconsolateness greater than the last.".
- discontented-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "After her injury, Alice was a discontented woman.".
- discontented-English-Adjective-2en hasExample "He lived a discontented life.".
- discontiguous-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "A discontiguous network comprises two major networks.".
- discontinue-English-Verb-1en hasExample "They plan to discontinue that design.".
- discontinuer-English-Noun-1en hasExample "He was no gadder abroad, or discontinuer from his convent, for a long time. 638496 Fuller.".
- discordant-English-Adjective-4en hasExample "Dikes may be discordant to country rock if they intrude at a high angle to the bedding".
- discordful-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "His discordful dame. 657303 Spenser.".
- discorso-Italian-Noun-1en hasExample "pronunciare (or tenere) un discorso - to deliver a speech".
- discorso-Italian-Noun-3en hasExample "cambiare discorso - to change the subject".
- discount-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "This store specializes in discount wares.".
- discount-English-Adjective-2en hasExample "If you're looking for cheap clothes, there's a discount clothier around the corner.".
- discourage-English-Verb-2en hasExample "Discourage litigation. Persuade your neighbors to compromise whenever you can (Abraham Lincoln )".
- discourtship-English-Noun-1en hasExample "Ben Jonson.".
- discover-English-Verb-2en hasExample "The gust of wind discovered a bone in the sand.".
- discover-English-Verb-3en hasExample "This move discovers an attack on a vital pawn.".
- discover-English-Verb-4en hasExample "I discovered my plans to the rest of the team.".
- discover-English-Verb-6en hasExample "Turning the corner, I discovered a lovely little shop.".
- discoveree-English-Noun-1en hasExample "...only the zeal of some fool friend more concerned for the glory of a discoverer than for the good of the discoveree 643993 Ambrose Bierce.".
- discovery-English-Noun-1en hasExample "This latest discovery should eventually lead to much better treatments for disease.".
- discovery-English-Noun-2en hasExample "The purpose of the voyage was discovery.".
- discovery-English-Noun-3en hasExample "The prosecution moved to suppress certain items turned up during discovery.".
- discovery-English-Noun-4en hasExample "The defense argued that the plaintiff's discovery was inadequate.".
- discrepancy-English-Noun-1en hasExample "They found a discrepancy between the first set of test results and the second, and they're still trying to figure out why.".
- discreta-Romanian-Adjective-1en hasExample "discreta femeie".
- discretion-English-Noun-1en hasExample "Bob showed great discretion despite his knowledge of the affair.".
- discretion-English-Noun-3en hasExample "I leave that to your discretion.".
- discriminate-English-Verb-1en hasExample "Since he was colorblind he was unable to discriminate between the blue and green bottles.".
- discriminate-English-Verb-2en hasExample "The law prohibits discriminating against people based on their skin color.".
- discrimination-English-Noun-3en hasExample "sexual or racial discrimination".
- discu\u021Bie-Romanian-Noun-1en hasExample "Discuția asta e complet proastă.".
- discure-English-Verb-1en hasExample "I will, if please you it discure, assay / To ease you of that ill, so wisely as I may. 656570 Spenser.".
- discusser-AngloNorman-Verb-1en hasExample "(Affairs of Ireland 274)".
- discussion-English-Noun-2en hasExample "Under each heading, you will find a discussion section.".
- disdain-English-Noun-1en hasExample "The cat viewed the cheap supermarket catfood with disdain and stalked away.".
- disde-Esperanto-Preposition-1en hasExample "Se vi ne tuj foriras disde mian vidon, mi ĵetegos vin tra la finestro!".
- disease-English-Noun-1en hasExample "The tomato plants had some kind of disease that left their leaves splotchy and fruit withered.".
- disease-ridden-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "disease-ridden livestock can pose a danger to public health".
- disembark-English-Verb-1en hasExample "The general disembarked the troops.".
- disencharm-English-Verb-1en hasExample "Jeremy Taylor.".
- disenslave-English-Verb-1en hasExample "He shall disenslave and redeem his soul. 657447 South.".
- disentangle-English-Verb-1en hasExample "I had to disentangle him from his own shoelaces.".
- disestablishment-English-Noun-1en hasExample "As evangelicals defect in one direction and traditionalists in the other, and disestablishment beckons with the reform of the House of Lords ... — The Times, October 21, 2009, Desperate bishops invited Rome to park its tanks on Archbishop’s lawn by Ruth Gledhill, Religion Correspondent".
- disgracious-English-Adjective-1en hasExample "Shakespeare.".
- disguise-English-Noun-1en hasExample "That cape and mask complete his disguise".
- disguise-English-Noun-3en hasExample "Any disguise may expose soldiers to be deemed enemy spies".
- disguise-English-Verb-1en hasExample "Spies often disguise themselves.".