feebleness in the PONS Dictionary

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
His feebleness of voice precluded him from popularity, and compelled his retirement from active duty in 1797.
en.wikipedia.org
The banality of evil, perhaps, is most tellingly revealed in the feebleness of its jokes.
www.winnipegfreepress.com
The government had done almost nothing to prepare for with famine, and critics noted the feebleness of its moral and administrative standards.
en.wikipedia.org
This veto seems another example of that shutting down, of that feebleness and fear.
www.irishexaminer.com
He gives many examples of the feebleness and vulgarity of the revisions.
blogs.telegraph.co.uk
And this feebleness has been costly.
www.independent.ie
Boys and men, despite their feebleness in some situations, generally pretend to be tough.
www.odt.co.nz
It has also shone a great deal of light on the feebleness of our own.
www.theglobeandmail.com
As an embarrassing as the scoreline is -- and it will be seared into the hearts of every supporter in attendance -- worse still was the feebleness of the effort.
www.telegraph.co.uk
The feebleness of the media in guiding us through this is particularly reprehensible, because much of what we need to know is happening here at home.
www.telegraph.co.uk

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