unchivalrous การใช้
- It has always been seen as unchivalrous to poison people in battle.
- Escaping from captivity was unchivalrous, and carried consequences, but was still common nonetheless.
- "It is petty and unchivalrous, " said Rep . Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif.
- It would have been " unchivalrous " to attack the enemy when they were not yet ready for battle.
- It should not be overlooked that " excessive " use of archers was somewhat looked down on by some, as unchivalrous.
- But there is also the long and mostly unchivalrous history of these two schools in the Pacific Coast Athletic Association that began in 1970.
- A few years later, in a rare act of diplomacy, Wills quelled tensions after a rival club used his " unchivalrous tactics " against Geelong.
- I spoke to Ms . Ozick a few days later to see how she was after what I felt was Riggio's unchivalrous exposure of her sales.
- For most of its history, men and women would rarely compete against each other in professional wrestling, as it was deemed to be unfair and unchivalrous.
- For example, cutting off the heads of enemies as war trophies was considered the norm in the battlefield but condemned as unchivalrous if the enemy had already surrendered.
- That alone represents a partial victory for Mrs . Jones and others who considered Clinton's behavior toward women unchivalrous at best, an abuse of power at worst.
- During a pause when night fell, some rebel officers were said to have pressed Munro for a night attack but he refused on the grounds that it was unchivalrous.
- __ Codex : Thanks to the unchivalrous tactics of jockey Angel Cordero on the turn for home in the 1980 Preakness, Codex almost literally knocked off Genuine Risk, the first filly in 65 years to win the Kentucky Derby.
- The Prince's lifelong resentment of his forced marriage to a social inferior persisted, and found unchivalrous expression in a bitter letter, his last to the king, in which he begged that his wife never be released from her exile to the countryside.
- Keegan also speculated that due to the relatively low number of archers actually involved in killing the French knights ( roughly 200 by his estimate ), together with the refusal of the English knights to assist in a duty they saw as distastefully unchivalrous and combined with the sheer difficulty of killing such a large number of prisoners in such a short space of time, the actual number of French knights killed might not have even reached the hundreds before the reserves fled the field and Henry called an end to the slaughter.