In many conservative areas of the Southern United States, it is unseemly for women to play Musical Instruments in public.
There are innumerable ways to use "unseemly" in a compound sentence. On example could be: The large, heavy St. Bernard dog looked unseemly for the obstacle course, but he was really quite agile.
Wooden features were replaced with stone while roofs, now considered unseemly, were hidden behind a stone parapet.
Ten o'clock at night is an unseemly time for a visit unless you have been invited.
The kinight's demeanor was so unseemly as to belie his status. The undercover detective's useemly alcoholic stench belied his identity so well as to fool even the most common drunken sailor on the docks.
unseemly
I would use it correctly in a sentence, of course. Thank you for asking.
It used to be unseemly for women to wear pants, but now it isn't.
Jarry use paroxysm in a sentence.\
I would use the word "theory" in a sentence like this: "The scientist presented a new theory to explain the findings of the experiment."
Would not that be "Would not that be?"?
no they weren't they would say that it would be unseemly for a woman to undertake such a profession
You would use 'me' in this case. You use 'I' when you are the subject of the sentence, and 'me' when you are the object of the sentence or the phrase, as in this case.Subject of sentence: I was going to get a picture.Object of phrase: I was going to get a picture of Kaeleah and me.Object of sentence: It was Kaeleah andme in the picture.