Ghastly in a sentence as an adjective

That screenshot is a ghastly smattering of black, grey, and red, with no unified look or feel.

I doubt you're going to "fumble" it, or that it's going to be a "ghastly hassle" to press a button one or more times.

The interfaces between the acts must provide end-to-end kindness, or the results may well be ghastly.

It's pretty ghastly that people are willing to fabricate rationale for getting into war.

I've found Santander to be absolutely ghastly as soon as any exceptions to their core process occur.

I'm Indian, and would like to start a gallery of "ghastly Indian government websites".

Even if they did have the original idea for Facebook, their execution of that idea was so ghastly that it doesn't even matter.

It has more in common with what we see with the Milgram experiment: lots of small cogs doing highly compartmentalized, abstract work that simply adds up to something ghastly.

Edison's envy of Tesla's flair for the dramatic led him directly to his ghastly practice of electrifying stray animals to portray AC as unsafe.

It has taken me years to integrate the experience, and I still have ghastly memories of the pains she endured recovering from unnecessary surgeries.

I think it is a misguided, but also completely understandable, desire on the part of modern Germans to be seen to completely disassociate themselves from their ghastly past.

In the time it took you to read that article about 20 Rhesus monkeys who will be cared for in the most humane way possible given the study parameters, roughly 1000 pigs and 300 cows were slaughtered in the USA, many living in ghastly conditions.

I still haven't mastered the language, I haven't mastered macros, protocols etc. and I bet my code is ghastly and non-idiomatic but I have still managed to write Clojure code that does what it is supposed to do in a highly concurrent workload.

Ghastly definitions

adjective

shockingly repellent; inspiring horror; "ghastly wounds"; "the grim aftermath of the bombing"; "the grim task of burying the victims"; "a grisly murder"; "gruesome evidence of human sacrifice"; "macabre tales of war and plague in the Middle ages"; "macabre tortures conceived by madmen"

See also: grim grisly gruesome macabre sick

adjective

gruesomely indicative of death or the dead; "a charnel smell came from the chest filled with dead men's bones"; "ghastly shrieks"; "the sepulchral darkness of the catacombs"

See also: charnel sepulchral