How to Use in tatters in a Sentence
in tatters
idiom-
The crew issued a mayday call, as the run-in with the storm left the front of the aircraft in tatters.
— Owen Bellwood / Jalopnik, Quartz, 11 June 2024 -
But since the Ukraine invasion, the treaty is in tatters.
— Chris Buckley, New York Times, 19 Apr. 2023 -
Hunger and disease are lurking, and the economy is in tatters.
— Rahim Faiez and Edith M. Lederer, The Christian Science Monitor, 6 Apr. 2023 -
Mike Zimmer had just been fired, and the team was in tatters after two non-playoff seasons.
— Steve Silverman, Forbes, 23 Jan. 2023 -
For his efforts, Carr was soon kicked out of Hollywood and left with a career in tatters.
— Nathan Smith, Rolling Stone, 21 Feb. 2023 -
But though his legacy now lays in tatters, not everything Trump has done in the Middle East is wrong.
— Zev Chafets, Star Tribune, 14 Jan. 2021 -
Even more bizarre, her nightgown, a wedding gift from Depp’s detox doctor, was in tatters, with raw meat wrapped inside the pieces.
— Tatiana Siegel, Rolling Stone, 5 May 2022 -
Though the pitching staff was in tatters one year after a historic championship run, the Sox passed on adding arms at great cost.
— Alex Speier, BostonGlobe.com, 3 Aug. 2023 -
There are times when our emotions are tattered, and the language that conveys them is also in tatters.
— Dennis Zhou, The New Yorker, 30 Jan. 2023 -
Hopes for a peaceful transition to civilian rule have been left in tatters.
— Ingrid Formanek, CNN, 28 June 2023 -
Two officers then bend the restrained White over a police car to search him for weapons, his button-down blue shirt in tatters.
— Howard Koplowitz | Hkoplowitz@al.com, al, 10 May 2022 -
From homelessness to crime, the California dream has been left in tatters for many.
— Steve Baltin, Forbes, 19 May 2022 -
The economy, Europe's poorest before the war, has been left in tatters.
— Nicole Fallert, USA TODAY, 22 Feb. 2024 -
The manuscript library, which had been kept in several rooms, had been left in tatters.
— Bora Erden, New York Times, 28 May 2024 -
With the country’s economy in tatters, funding for culture and in turn, cinema, was the first to be cut, said Lichy.
— Anna Marie De La Fuente, Variety, 26 May 2022 -
The economy, by most metrics Europe's weakest before the war, has been left in tatters.
— John Bacon, USA TODAY, 22 Feb. 2024 -
The Fukushima countryside was no longer a fruit kingdom, and its farmers’ livelihoods were in tatters.
— Kate Graham-Shaw, Scientific American, 9 Oct. 2024 -
His ambitions were in tatters after failing to enter, let alone cross the Gulf of Alaska.
— David Reamer | Alaska History, Anchorage Daily News, 9 July 2023 -
When the couple arrived in 1976, a half-finished renovation had left this room in tatters.
— Curbed, 17 Jan. 2024 -
Months of fierce fighting across Sudan has left hopes for a peaceful transition to civilian rule in tatters.
— Mohammed Tawfeeq, CNN, 17 June 2023 -
Today, those traditions may be in tatters, but Kennan’s counsel has lost none of its salience.
— Andrew J. Bacevich, Foreign Affairs, 28 Feb. 2023 -
Boris Johnson left Downing Street, his party in tatters.
— Tunku Varadarajan, WSJ, 25 Oct. 2022 -
However, the 48-hour demise of FTX left his reputation in tatters.
— Bychloe Taylor, Fortune, 21 July 2023 -
The program was in tatters when Drew took over in 2003, in the aftermath of a wide-ranging scandal centering around a player’s murder.
— Zach Osterman, The Indianapolis Star, 5 Apr. 2021 -
These moments occurred after the two world wars and the Cold War, when upheavals in great power relations left the global system and the old world of empires in tatters.
— G. John Ikenberry, Foreign Affairs, 1 Nov. 2022 -
Conversations start with bitterness about how the U.S. left Iraq in tatters.
— John Daniszewski, BostonGlobe.com, 16 Mar. 2023 -
That failure left the pretense of a severe but effective Kemalist state in tatters.
— Soner Cagaptay, Foreign Affairs, 1 Mar. 2023 -
The fact that team morale was in tatters after Saturday night’s loss only makes matters more difficult.
— Ryan Kartje, Los Angeles Times, 24 Oct. 2023 -
With Tigrayan forces on the offensive and ethnic conflicts flaring in other parts of Ethiopia, the very fabric binding his ancient country lies in tatters.
— New York Times, 29 June 2021 -
Arizona's offense was in tatters, struggling to move the chains on key situational downs.
— Jeremy Cluff, The Arizona Republic, 23 Dec. 2021
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'in tatters.' 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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