Humiliating in a sentence as an adjective

I'd say going to war with Google will be at best a waste of time, and most likely a string of humiliating losses.

When you have a diverse group, you have the strong beating up the weak and the smart verbally humiliating the dumb.

"Arringtons game here is pure deflection with an end-goal of humiliating critics as hard as he can.

It was absolutely humiliating, and I'm still recovering from it in the worst of ways.

In fact it's downright insulting, and most importantly, humiliating to an extreme degree.

The problem is not in how we apply these invasive, wasteful, and humiliating security procedures.

There is no penalty for going to town on the guy - for them its just a more exciting day on the job - for him it's a humiliating loss of personal autonomy.

Her experience with the medical system was humiliating, futile, and expensive.

[0] Corporal punishment would have to be pretty awful to be more brutal, humiliating, violent, or vindictive than prison.

Some incorrections here and there in the article, I want to add some fixes:- I wouldn't say the exigence of having a bank account is humiliating for a company.

Since that humiliating experience I have travelled by plane in Europe as little as possible, taking the Eurostar train wherever practical.

I know it sucks because you probably need that $8/hour right at this point but in the grand scheme, the "pizza party" and "wheel of fish" is about the most humiliating ridiculousness I've heard in quite some time.

Isn't the craziness well known abroad?In most of the world people who want to be tourists in the USA dread the extensive and humiliating application interview, questionnaire, and documentation process just to get a visa.

Publicly humiliating your newest employee for the incredible crime of "volunteering to help take care of something when the person responsible is out sick" is really, really dumb and a great way to ensure that nobody ever helps anybody else with anything.

Point A is minor, while Point B, having been married to an Arab national for only over a year, has proven that being anything other than American or one of the European countries of high standing is very uncomfortable for anything requiring travel, and often humiliating.

Forty years of ripping off other people's software, berating and humiliating his own team, buying and shutting down competitors, and impeding progress in the name of vendor lock-in, plus the newly-published "insider" memoir of his co-founder isn't enough for you?I've met Bill Gates, so I'll stick with my personal opinion.

He was described as "remote, coldly aloof, ruthless aristocrat, living in lonely magnificence, disdaining the common people... an exceptional man, a lone wolf whose strength and courage could be looked up to, but at the same time had to be feared; an eccentric, misanthropic genius whose haughty bearing, cold eye and steely reserve made it impossible to like or trust him." [Interesting anecdote: He had all the walls of his penthouse office at the Tribune covered with dark wood, including the door, so that after your meeting ended, you would have great difficulty finding the door to get back out, suffering under his humiliating gaze.

Humiliating definitions

adjective

causing awareness of your shortcomings; "golf is a humbling game"

See also: demeaning humbling mortifying