Embarrassment in a sentence as a noun

"And that's the stuff that people could be bothered to drive to the store, look a person in the eye, and drop off without too much embarrassment.

Do you understand what's different this time?Honestly, the comments on this thread are such an embarrassment.

It is an embarrassment to Paul T. Crayton and the State of California, and this "default deny" stance on innovation has just as much chilling effect as patent trolls.

It almost sounds like they didn't have a court extension, and were lying that they did, and eventually had to hand the domain back out of sheer embarrassment.

On balance, protecting GitHub from public embarrassment is far outweighed by the potentional impact of this sort of flaw.

Overall, it was a massive embarrassment for everyone involved.

" This could have been an opportunity to attempt bring someone, a powerful CEO, to the side of being informed and support gay rights but instead it was a witch hunt and an embarrassment.

Because almost everything all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure - these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important.

But political embarrassment and partisan show victories are exactly what motivates politicians to do things.

Am I the only one that was confused about that last line of "already working on something new and hope to announce that in February"...He's gone through something as traumatic as a lawsuit, a resignation, potential for trial, potential embarrassment of family, friends, colleagues all in the last two weeks...

Extracts:"... links between key former employees of the worlds best-known, most prestigious, most self-consciously high-minded consulting firm and a corrupt hedge fund boss...""...it was a public embarrassment, a private outrage and even a potential threat to the future of the Firm, as McKinseyites call their employer.""...

Embarrassment definitions

noun

the shame you feel when your inadequacy or guilt is made public

noun

the state of being embarrassed (usually by some financial inadequacy); "he is currently suffering financial embarrassments"

noun

some event that causes someone to be embarrassed; "the outcome of the vote was an embarrassment for the liberals"

noun

extreme excess; "an embarrassment of riches"

See also: overplus plethora superfluity