Dismayed in a sentence as an adjective

I have no affiliation with the app at all, but I too was incredibly dismayed by how awful Gmail + Mail. app works these days.

Those people will not be unduly dismayed when they need to reverse engineer a wireline protocol one day, and 'pick up couchbase' the next. All this to say, sure, there's no such thing as an elite language.

They do so with inscrutable and nebulous reasons that leave all involved feeling dismayed. This is purely a matter of opinion.

But when we read articles about subjects in which we have expertise, I find I'm routinely dismayed at the inaccuracies. I am no longer surprised by this, but still bothered.

Is anyone else dismayed by the implicit view of these sorts of articles, that browsers should be complicated and full of all these insecure features? It reminds me strongly of PDF and Acrobat.

Adjusted for inflation, the total came to just over $1m, and Ms Morone confesses to being dismayed at how little output this investment had produced.

Overall I'm pretty dismayed by your characterisation of Go as an open source project. We have a lot of great contributors from outside Google and your ignorant comments do them a great disservice.

So while I'm dismayed that this pattern will continue, it's nice to know that there are some people who know the difference between a good programmer and one who puts in overlong hours.

This article confused and dismayed me. Since 2001, we've started in on the XP/Agile movement, which, think what you will of it, test-drives and version-controls relentlessly, and fosters a constant dialog about what quality is and how to achieve it.

I am dismayed that a security-oriented protocol isn't focused on minimalast design. That seems very backward to me.

I'm pretty dismayed to read this. If you regularly connect to random wireless networks in cafes and hotels, you're a moron if you don't connect through a VPN. If you're not connecting through a VPN all your non-SSL/TLS traffic is available for reading for whatever bored ******* has found his way onto the router.

I am somewhat more dismayed that the article seemed to present a good enough case for this all on its own, but the discussion so far is ignoring it -- almost as if everyone just skimmed it.

When he finds remnants of a physics book on optics in the abbey he is dismayed because he had wasted years of his life re-discovering the principals within the book himself. The last section of the book, "Fiat Voluntas Tua", takes place when man now has nuclear weapons again and technology has advanced to beyond the point of the first near apocalypse event.

I'm really dismayed by this story, because it reminds me of too many conversations with young professionals who are stuck in their career because they are not professionally developing out of some inner rage. Quoting: > "Amy admits she'll "never know" if she wasn't hired by Google because she's female, because she's not an engineer, or whether there was something else wrong with her application."

I'm dismayed that this article portrays Julia so much as my creation and downplays the roles of Jeff and Viral – if anyone deserves the lion's share of the credit for the language, it's Jeff. I'm guessing this happened because I had a publication-quality photo available for use and told a relatable narrative in the interview we did, whereas Jeff stuck somewhat more to technical matters.

Dismayed definitions

adjective

struck with fear, dread, or consternation

See also: appalled shocked