Blemish in a sentence as a noun

The only real blemish on git is that lightweight tags should not exist.

Get out quickly though, because it could easily become a blemish on your resume.

Upgrading that beige blemish of a smoke detector purely for looks will be worth $130 to many.

A minor blemish on someone's face might not be relevant, but replacing a rifle with flowers could be substantial.

It reaches the point where more than 1/3rd want to leave SK.[1]That one cannot escape an accident of birth is a huge blemish on humanity.

But I can definitely say that the mythos of the well-earning "self-made" IT man was a major blemish on the idea, not an asset.

Blemish in a sentence as a verb

Within four minutes, one kid not only opened the box, but found the on/off switchWow, found a blemish on an unusually featureless, smooth object and poked at it.

In my opinion, this is a horrible blemish on an otherwise good Norwegian legal syste, but it's understandably a sore subject.

They may accept the job intending to retire there in 30 or 40 years, but instead they leave quickly, adding an early blemish to their CVs."Leaving your job is considered an early blemish?

Then again, I wouldn't want to blemish a prosecutor's high conviction rate by invoking basic human liberties like expressing an opinion.

RubySpec is a huge success in the Ruby community amongst implementations, I'd hardly call EY ending sponsorship a blemish for RubySpec.

Blemish definitions

noun

a mark or flaw that spoils the appearance of something (especially on a person's body); "a facial blemish"

See also: defect

verb

mar or spoil the appearance of; "scars defaced her cheeks"; "The vandals disfigured the statue"

See also: deface disfigure

verb

mar or impair with a flaw; "her face was blemished"

See also: spot

verb

add a flaw or blemish to; make imperfect or defective

See also: flaw