0 disappointment or anger, especially when caused by a failure or mistake: --
1 a feeling of being upset, disappointed, or annoyed, esp. because of a failure or mistake: --
There is little justice in the 100m qualification as it could lead to an increase in tariffs, much to the chagrin of the small fields.
We have no reason to be chagrined at progress of that sort in other countries.
Their chagrin is manifest in all these brutalities; they have stimulated their people to do these things.
Too often, public health has been the cinderella service for health authorities, to the chagrin of many of the staff working in those authorities.
Moore's chagrin over the desire to merge with respectable society equals his contempt for middle-class representations that advertised acting as a female profession.
Against this backdrop, it's not surprising that laypeople and scientists alike are fascinated (and often chagrined) by what appear to be lapses in reasoning and weaknesses in conduct.
But the question of verification is not the same as the question of truth, as the positivists themselves discovered to their own chagrin.
Many thousands of workers became mobilized in unions without voting - to the chagrin of union leaders who were interested in electoral influence.