The phrase
"dreadful night" means a night that is very bad or unpleasant.
Full definition
Still fresh in our memories are the arguments about who is the greatest; the weakness of character exposed on that
recent dreadful night and their slow wit in so many situations.
It's not a zero - sum game, but that's is baseball's competition, and the odds are overwhelming that if you carve out three hours for Curry, he's going to do something Curry - ish before the night is over, even if he has
a dreadful night.
His replacement, Stanford transfer and Nebraska native Scott Frost, had
a dreadful night against the Sun Devils, with just six pass completions in 20 attempts and with a hand in all three safeties.
The final of the 1966/67 tournament would be the first to be played in a one - off match at Wembley but it was to be
a dreadful night at The Hawthorns with Albion romping to a 4 - 0 first leg lead.
So one
dreadful night, I did indeed let her cry it out.
Labour did lose ground, but it did not have
the dreadful night that many in the party had feared.
Labour had
a dreadful night, only improving its share of the vote by 0.2 %, leading many commentators to question whether Ed Miliband's «one nation» message is gaining any traction in the south.
This depressing collection of stories remains a stark reminder of
that dreadful night in 1953 when Southend and Essex were hit by an onslaught of sea water which caused terrible flooding and many deaths.
But it was
a dreadful night for Theresa May's Tories, with a string of ministers losing their seats.
She thinks Patterson was actually hearing the sounds of hyenas that
dreadful night.
It gave me further insight on what actually happened and took place in this botched handling of the case and details the sad accounts of what happened to 3 young boys on
the dreadful night of May 5th.
So when I set out to refinish this piece I was determined to prove to myself (and maybe Kyle) that
that dreadful night was all worth it in the end.