invidious - use in sentences

Modifying Another Word

  • perhaps: It is perhaps invidious to criticize such an ambitious and fundamentally valuable undertaking as this on these grounds.
  • however: It is however invidious to have different funding mechanisms applying to young people's learning opportunities.
  • always: Naming names within a short exercise in reminiscence like this is always invidious, but there are two names which must not go unrecorded.
  • very: What often happens in such cases can be very invidious for all concerned.
  • not: Q If ITV merges, is it not invidious that two sales houses will report to one Plc?

Infinitive complement

  • pick: I enjoyed reading so many of the essays in this book that it is invidious to pick out favorites.
  • single: It would be invidious to single out any by name.
  • name: But it would be invidious to name some, when all our teachers were so friendly and approachable.
  • select: So many officials have made so many mistakes over so many years that it would be invidious to select a single example of incompetence.
  • say: That being so, it is the less invidious to say that the charge was a gross blunder.
  • make: Sometimes I think it is invidious to make comparisons with one type of terrorism and another.

Modifies a noun

  • comparison: Keith Hill: I would not want to make that kind of invidious comparison.
  • distinction: Segmentation is a social technology whose primary function is the creation of invidious distinctions.
  • position: You will never be in the invidious position of not knowing whether you are making or losing money at any particular time.
  • discrimination: This article addresses the most common colloquial sense of the word, invidious discrimination.
  • choice: Blair was confronted with an invidious choice that nobody in the British establishment has wanted to make: Europe or America.
  • task: In trying to determine where we are, I fear we would leave an invidious task for judges and juries.

Used with adjective complement

  • seem: So it seems particularly invidious to encourage the use of other smokable drugs, such as cannabis.

The word usage examples above have been gathered from various sources to reflect current and historical usage. They do not represent the opinions of YourDictionary.com.