I'm just trying. You could say:
-She should be ashamed of herself for being fake and abusive to her husband. (adj)
-She should be ashamed of herself for being a faker and an abuser to her husband. (n)
-She should be ashamed of herself for abusing her husband and being fake.
I can't say your sentence is wrong, but I really stuck with it because of using "for", "being" and "and". Anyhow, I don't think you can use "abused" in your context because it would give a completely different meaning that you don't want.
train cpu 825 She should be ashamed of herself for being a faker and abusing her husband.
Just guessing you may mean this:
She should be ashamed of herself for being a faker about being abused by her husband.
Or,
She should be ashamed of herself for lying about being abused by her husband.
CJ
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Comments
It's grammatically correct, but the meaning seems strange enough to make us think it's not the meaning you had in mind.
CJ