The company achieved infamy five years ago when it suffered a huge loss due to a scandal.
NOTE: infamy means having a bad or evil reputation brought about by a criminal or shocking act.
It was a day that would live on in infamy.
Infamy, infamy, they've all got it in for me.
First off infamy means famous for something bad. Here's an example. Pete Wentz is infamous for posting innapropriate pictures on the web, while he is famous for being the the band Fall Out Boy.
The assassin lived a life of infamy, for all the people he killed. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, FDR called December 7, 1941 a day that would live in the annals of infamy.
Infamy (the noun) is also an adjective (infamous), referring to being remembered for something bad. The best-known use of the word came from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Here's a sentence: President Roosevelt called the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in December 1941 "a day that will live in infamy." And it has-- many people still learn about it, and remember what a terrible event it was.
The most famous sentence with this word was spoken by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in December 1941, after the Japanese military attacked Pearl Harbor (Hawaii). He said that December 7, 1941 was "a date that will live in infamy"-- in other words, it would always be remembered, and not in a good way. Infamy refers to being notorious, being remembered for doing something really bad. The adjective is "infamous" (it's the opposite of famous).
Can you use the word concluding in a sentence? Done.
You can use the word Truss in a sentence like this.
Just use it! Or do you mean, can you use the word beheld in a sentence.
Depravity, immorality, infamy, flagrancy and iniquity
How do you use the word decibel in a sentence?What is decibel used for?
Since that is not a word I would not attempt to use it in a sentence.