Perdition in a sentence as a noun

If it is consumed by sin, he will be cast into perdition.

The road to perdition is paved with good intentions....

We collectively missed that turning and we've stuck to the road to perdition ever since.

It's like Catholics debating the nature of original sin. Were the engineers born in perdition, or did they fall from grace?

Over my dead body!I’ll chase them round the moons of Nibea and round Antares Maelstrom and round perdition's flames before I pay $99 for a ******* email address!

I am in Beijing of China, and ... looks can't retrieve my location after I allowed the perdition of accessing my geo-location within my web browser.

Premature achievers as well indeed take the idea of making the first step further down the perdition road and assume it's indeed even better to announce it publicly.

Your argument is that maybe it's okay if teens are pregnant, totally ignoring the social reality around you. Bravo, sir!Let's trap women in an unending economic and social perdition because they'll have empathy!

Him the Almighty Power Hurled headlong flaming from the ethereal sky With hideous ruin and combustion down To bottomless perdition, there to dwell In adamantine chains and penal fire...

There is certainly a xenophobic strain in the Chronicles of Narnia, most evident in what is otherwise my favorite book in the series, "The horse and his boy." I can only think that to Lewis's ear, the word "Turkish" had a certain brutality to it that contrasted well with "delight" and paired well with Edmund's perdition.

They invaded the hexagons, showed credentials which were not always false, leafed through a volume with displeasure and condemned whole shelves: their hygienic, ascetic furor caused the senseless perdition of millions of books.

The degeneration of the atheist community is making me seriously consider the unpleasant idea that religion serves the vital purpose of filling the "obviously irrational belief over which we bond" whole in our hearts, and we've abandoned it to our perdition.

Perdition definitions

noun

(Christianity) the abode of Satan and the forces of evil; where sinners suffer eternal punishment; "Hurl'd headlong...To bottomless perdition, there to dwell"- John Milton; "a demon from the depths of the pit"; "Hell is paved with good intentions"-Dr. Johnson

See also: Hell Inferno