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For many people, the city has become the capital of inhospitality.
She experienced for the first time the frightening inhospitality of city streets.
Or was it his hometown's inhospitality "to people who did not fit in"?
The lack of a window added to the inhospitality of the room.
Like many New Yorkers, we make a principle of inhospitality.
Anything to please the soldiers, lest they complain of inhospitality to their master.
Would we lay upon them the burden of the sin of inhospitality?
They all preserve, however, the common characteristics of barrenness, inhospitality, and misery.
Such inhospitality is not terribly Christian of him.
"Its inhospitality will prevent the Dominion from following me.
He travelled far, untroubled by the inhospitality of nature.
Such inhospitality was unheard of among their race.
He was greeted by a display of Southern inhospitality when the predominantly white crowd booed him.
I trust, however, that you will explain to your friends the cause of my sudden departure and my seeming inhospitality.
Fuel is short here, and-" The whining voice continued explaining its inhospitality.
And to keep a close eye on your area, in case he decides to retaliate for your inhospitality."
"At your inhospitality or the furnishings?"
If the colonists had landed among disorganized or indecisive tribes, the inhospitality might not have mattered.
"The sin of Sodom was inhospitality, not homosexuality.
She had been ashamed, before, merely of Billy's inhospitality, and surliness, and unfairness.
In better days, perhaps, the incident could simply have been dismissed as another example of New York boorishness and inhospitality, albeit an egregious one.
"I regret my earlier inhospitality.
In his dream he was walking naked through a strange and hostile land, both beautiful and frightening in its inhospitality to man.
The sea's increasing inhospitality, in fact, has turned Bombay Beach and other small resort communities on its shore into near ghost towns.
The interior design of the Station was Arctic in its antiseptic inhospitality, the corridors shining with sourceless, polar light.