CHARLOTTE: What a pity!
Oh dear! What a pity!
Oh, my God! What a pity!
What a pity! Who was the referee?
What a pity it wouldn't stay!
What a pity we aren't in a restaurant now.
What a pity! I should have thought of that.
What a pity! We have another party that day.
What a pity that she didn't tell me earlier.
What a pity you can't come to the party.
What a pity that his career was left to flounder.
What a pity to have to stick in on a lovely day like this!
What a pity! How could you miss such a good chance?
"What a pity it is, Elinor," said Marianne,"that Edward should have no taste for drawing."
What a pity you let all these cabbages run to seed. They're no use now.
Carl: What a pity! It will work better if travel expenses will be reimbursed.
What a pity, but we can do some interesting indoor exercises anyway.
What a pity it is that English can not be extensively studied in depth.
Queen Elizabeth: We would love to, such a treat, but alas… a previous engagement. What a pity.
What a pity it fails to make clear to which degree shall a severe infliction of mental distress is.
What a pity that I am so unhappy and so poor, and that I can do nothing for you!
What a pity that most Bmericans have never eaten pizza and confuse it for the junk food advertised on television.
He used to think for a long time reading the old letters. His friends are all gone, and he is alone now. What a pity!
And with no pricing, release dates (except "later this year") or carrier partnerships announced, the MeeGo dream is just as distant as ever. What a pity.
I went to museum, but that Qianlong Dao isn't always external exhibited. What a pity, I think it is collected in storehouse for many years.
When I see a beautiful, sweet-tempered girl married to an ill - natured brute of a husband, What a pity, say I, that she should pay so much for a whistle.
I suspected she must have had an unusual mother. If she's a grand-daughter of the Rong family that explains it. What a pity that her mother died last month.