Scarred in a sentence as an adjective

That would have scarred me for life. Anyway, he's got the right idea.

RIP to a magnificent man who brought so much pride to the people of our scarred continent.

Java was the first language I learned so I may very well be scarred from the experience.

Maybe things have improved since then, but I left that experience so scarred that I'm never touching their dev tools again.

I think it's scarred me for life; I'd rather use Java than write a program in a graphical language again.

If you don't know how to treat the parrot, it could be emotionally scarred and spend many decades feeling. .

This is unless you were using VSS before at which point you are scarred for life. I made a fair bit of cash between '03-'07 saving people from botched, painful VSS and TFS environments.

Blows them away every time - to most people it's just a yellowish glowing thing in the sky, rather than a scarred rocky globe.

Crockford is a scarred veteran of the spec wars. I'm sure that when he sees young people trying to game spec/implementation ambiguities, he thinks, "Never again!

Apple is scarred of the runaway train that is Android. They are having Windows flashbacks and faced with loosing in the marketplace they go for legal blitzkrieg.

There was absolutely no reward in showing up to work, and some of the things they saw have likely scarred their memories forever

The dot com bubble scarred a generation of management. These firms hoard cash, disdain debt and covet the reliability size brings.

In high school I had two teachers who were involved in the bush war or 'spent time on the border' as it is often referred to, both of them clearly very scarred by their experiences. One of them outright shell shocked.

Novell and Sun tanked, Google will be the first to survive Schmidt's effects, albeit scarred. There are financially worse CEOs, but Schmidt attacked companies that I particularly liked with the same repeat effects.

This lady was obviously deeply emotionally scarred by her failed marriage to this man. I also feel some sympathy for the officers involved.

Why are you giving weight to this not very accurate representations of anyone going into a technical career being socially scarred? Even if it has some basis in fact, it's nowhere near ubiquitous.

How is it that we are dead scarred of this "muslim terrorist leaving in a cave in Afganistan/Syria/Irak/ next target", but we were fine living next-door to our homemade ones ? Long before 9/11, I travelled with bottle of wine from spain to the uk and bottle of whisky to spain from the uk.

Our community management team is probably scarred for life. Our engineers also hated it, because its backend was horrendous and we had a lot of availability issues; the service would go down constantly.

While it's tough to criticize the decision to leave a child in the car for a few minutes -- happened to me all the time as a child -- I'm forever scarred by seeing a dead child pulled out of a car in the office complex next to mine [1]. The dad was bashing his head against a tree trying to knock himself unconscious because he was so overcome with grief.

In those days, there was nothing that men could do to protect themselves against the lst random shots in the cosmic bombardment that had once scarred the face of the Moon. The meteorites of 1908 and 1947 had struck uninhabited wilderness; but by the end of the twety-first century there was no region left on Earth that could be safely used for celestial target practice.

Turn to any major network around 8-9pm on a weekday and you will see one of those CSI shows where ****** investigators walk around a terribly mangled body, crack jokes and focus on some suspicious looking powder on the victim's collar almost as if the burned, dismembered or scarred corpse shown in full view is not even there. My 4 year old nephew is still awake at that time and I have to be conscious of what channel is on TV. I'm almost semi-convinced that they are training us all to become apathetic to those images so we can go to war one day.

Scarred definitions

adjective

deeply affected or marked by mental or physical pain or injury; "Could her scarred mind ever be free of fear?"; "a face scarred by anxiety"; "the fire left her arm badly scarred"

adjective

blemished by injury or rough wear; "the scarred piano bench"; "walls marred by graffiti"

See also: marred