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discommode
[ dis-kuh-mohd ]
verb (used with object)
- to cause inconvenience to; disturb, trouble, or bother.
discommode
/ ËŒ»åɪ²õ°ìəˈ³¾É™ÊŠ»å /
verb
- tr to cause inconvenience or annoyance to; disturb
Derived Forms
- ËŒ»å¾±²õ³¦´Ç³¾Ëˆ³¾´Ç»å¾±´Ç³Ü²õ, adjective
- ËŒ»å¾±²õ³¦´Ç³¾Ëˆ³¾´Ç»å¾±´Ç³Ü²õly, adverb
Other ˜yÐÄvlog Forms
- »å¾±²õc´Ç³¾Â·³¾´Çd¾±Â·´Ç³Ü²õ adjective
- »å¾±²õc´Ç³¾Â·³¾´Çd¾±Â·´Ç³Ü²õ·ly adverb
- »å¾±²õc´Ç³¾Â·³¾´Çd¾±Â·´Ç³Ü²õ·ness noun
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of discommode1
Example Sentences
It enacts the experience, purposefully discommoding that part of the audience that has long expected plays to gratify their emotional pleasures and endorse their sense of moral righteousness.
The reason that they feel discommoded is that now, many years on, many of their lethal activities are being investigated for the first time ever.
I recall my keen disappointment during the 1964 convention when President Johnson insisted that the Freedom Democrats be rejected, in the interest of not discommoding white Southerner voters.
Then, again, one could legalize certain narcotics to discommode the drug dealers and adopt Steve Forbes’s flat tax to fill up the Treasury.
Blatter had false money thrown at him and he looked most discommoded.
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