The Collaborative International Dictionary
Discommode \Dis`com*mode"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Discommoded; p. pr. & vb. n. Discommoding.] [See Discommodate.] To put inconvenience; to incommode; to trouble. [R.]
Syn: To incommode; annoy; inconvenience.
Wiktionary
vb. (en-past of: discommode)
Usage examples of "discommoded".
Jiro sat up straight, irked that he had not been told at once, and maddened that some other faction, rather than the Anasati, had discommoded the Lady.
Jiro himself was discommoded, but he covered this with a swift glance at Chumaka, who murmured the appropriate name behind his hand in a tone only his master could hear.
Down the ladder they went, and the captain cast off and rowed as if ten thousand demons pursued him, lest the discommoded merchant appear and raise outcry.
One more traveler would have made no difference to any of my father's arrangements or discommoded the expedition.
There was a spate of screams and angry protests from those discommoded which settled into an ominous murmur.
Jiro himselfwas discommoded, but he covered this with a swift glanceat Chumaka, who murmured the appropriate name behindhis hand in a tone only his master could hear.
The men returned to their places and slept, seemingly not discommoded by the cramped discomfort.
Entipy was likewise discommoded, but the old woman seemed utterly nonplussed.
The mistakes he had made weren't such as would normally have discommoded him and he had done his damnedest to rectify them by eliminating me.