How to Use chasten in a Sentence

chasten

verb
  • The episode chastened the APA, which established the rule in 1973.
    Leonard L. Glass, STAT, 28 June 2018
  • The media, chastened by the birther episode, didn’t bite.
    Joshua Green, Daily Intelligencer, 9 July 2017
  • There is no sense of chastening or remorse on the right.
    Jonathan Chait, Daily Intelligencer, 5 Feb. 2018
  • Chuck Todd: What example in the life of Donald Trump has been chastened?
    NBC News, 6 Feb. 2020
  • When the Giants reached out, Sandoval jumped at the chance to return home, a prodigal son chastened over his misdeeds.
    Jorge L. Ortiz, USA TODAY, 29 June 2018
  • Xavier, at times, looked like a team chastened by the physicality, or at least a team unable to cope with it.
    Patrick Brennan, Cincinnati.com, 19 Mar. 2018
  • But the Victoria Woodhull who emerged like the phoenix from the ashes of her demolished life was a new and chastened person.
    John Strausbaugh, National Review, 8 Feb. 2020
  • Despite the huge losses, Mr. Son did not appear chastened.
    Ben Dooley, New York Times, 12 Feb. 2020
  • The crew members creep out of their cabins, chastened, relieved, curious to see what the outside world looks like.
    Bucky McMahon, Esquire, 14 Sep. 2015
  • Black girls called out more overall, but were also chastened at a higher rate than other kids who called out.
    Natalie Jacewicz, The Cut, 28 June 2017
  • At the heart of the Nicomachean Ethics is a claim that remains both edifying and chastening: phronesis doesn’t come that easy.
    Nikhil Krishnan, The New Yorker, 26 June 2023
  • Collin Street Bakery says it has been chastened by the experience.
    star-telegram, 11 Mar. 2014
  • And there is little sign that Trump was chastened by this experience.
    Eric Levitz, Daily Intelligencer, 17 May 2018
  • Something with which to chasten or reform erring members?
    Jay Nordlinger, National Review, 7 Nov. 2019
  • Sophie Taeuber-Arp, the abstract artist who died in 1943 at the age of fifty-three, was the most exquisitely chastened of all the idealists of her generation.
    Jed Perl, The New York Review of Books, 7 Mar. 2019
  • The results may chasten some of the investors demanding that the car companies keep traveling down this path.
    Jonathan M. Gitlin, Ars Technica, 24 Mar. 2023
  • For anyone wondering if men in music have felt chastened and reflective in the #MeToo era, there's your answer.
    August Brown, latimes.com, 27 Apr. 2018
  • One man who might be particularly chastened by this snub is Aarons, who was singing the new gaffer's praises just a month ago to the same publication.
    SI.com, 22 Aug. 2019
  • However, there have been chastening defeats to Leicester City and Manchester City in the mix.
    SI.com, 8 Sep. 2019
  • The Commission had been chastened by an earlier controversy over a device called the Hush-A-Phone.
    Matthew Lasar, Ars Technica, 13 Dec. 2017
  • That attack also followed an alleged chemical-weapons attack, but what was meant to chasten the Assad regime and its allies at the time did nothing of the sort.
    Ishaan Tharoor, Washington Post, 16 Apr. 2018
  • The idea was to uphold the social order, to prevent someone from passing themselves off as a member of a different class, to keep women covered and the poor chastened.
    Constance Grady, Vox, 27 June 2019
  • And these days, a Silicon Valley chastened by years of butting heads with government might see cooperation as the smarter move.
    Julia Greenberg, Wired News, 20 May 2015
  • Feeling chastened, perhaps, Neymar trimmed his mohawk before the final group-stage game.
    Dan Adler, Vanities, 29 June 2018
  • But the recent price bust chastened both seasoned executives and young people about to enter the industry.
    Houston Chronicle, 13 July 2018
  • Is that at all going to chasten more Republicans other than Mitch McConnell?
    NBC News, 19 Dec. 2021
  • No matter the scale of its most recent failure, or the number of people who, chastened, insist that the End of History is nigh, socialism always seems to return for more.
    Charles C. W. Cooke, National Review, 13 Feb. 2020
  • He was chastened against Belgium, even discouraging the referee from checking VAR at one point.
    Jonathan Wilson, SI.com, 7 July 2018
  • Chastened by the letter, Carson offered a gracious on-air apology.
    Jeet Heer, New Republic, 28 Aug. 2017
  • But independent biologists told me they were far more downbeat, chastened by the scope of losses.
    Andrew Revkin, National Geographic, 7 Mar. 2019

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'chasten.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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