Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
I do not wish to see him hurt for some groundless suspicion that he has given me aid.
It'll then seem far too plausible to waste time on groundless suspicions that it's all a ploy.
Your Commander Sisko seems a bit given to groundless suspicions."
I'm confused, but it isn't fair to harbour groundless suspicions towards Yeb.
But it will difficult for the skeptics to argue that Washington's case against Iraq is based on groundless suspicions and not intelligence information.
Banks obviously briefed you on his groundless suspicions, and you're here to do his dirty work for him.
Unless there is some entity to review executive decisons, groundless suspicion will tend to replace reasonable judgment about security risks.
You can easily see that if you refuse to answer me you will arouse unpleasant, though, I am sure, groundless suspicions."
"When I spoke to Gul Dukat, he told me that you were given to such groundless suspicions of others' motives.
Ethel, fed up with the groundless suspicion that Ren is forced to suffer as the "new kid", commiserates alongside Vi.
The main wonder of their relationship is that he hasn't had one, just to get away from Georgie's bouts of self-pity, her groundless suspicions and her incoherent outbursts.
Suspicions Groundless Suspicions arose Sunday about one runner, Roberto Barbi of Italy, who did not show up among the leaders during the race, but finished sixth in 2:10:55.
On 12 March 1804 he was there unexpectedly arrested, and, on the groundless suspicion that he was in secret communication with the royal family, was held a prisoner in Paris for eight months.
In the end, when it turns out that, for all his faults, Johnny is no murderer, the film version becomes a cautionary tale in its own right about the dangers of groundless suspicion based only on assumed, incomplete, and circumstantial evidence.
It made such a painful impression upon him to hear her talking in this haughty tone, and to see her patting her contemptuous lips with her fan, that he said very earnestly, 'Believe me, ma'am, this is unjust, a perfectly groundless suspicion.'
Some recent authors have been inspired by the example of Robert Baer, who quit the agency after 22 years and says he wrote "See No Evil" in 2002 "out of anger" at the spy bureaucracy, which had ordered him polygraphed twice in one year because of what he considered groundless suspicions.