disgrace

disgrace [dɪsˈgreɪs]  [dɪsˈɡres] 

disgrace

第三人称单数:disgraces

第三人称复数:disgraces

现在分词:disgracing

过去分词:disgraced

过去式:disgraced

disgrace 基本解释

名词耻辱; 丢脸; 不光彩; 丢脸的人(或事)

及物动词使丢脸; 使失宠; 使受耻辱; 贬黜

disgrace 同义词

disgrace

动词shame discredit humiliate embarrass dishonor

名词shame

disgrace 反义词

名词honor

disgrace 相关词组

1. be in disgrace : 失宠, 丢脸;

disgrace 相关例句

及物动词

1. The head of the section disgraced himself last night by drinking too much.
    昨天夜里科长喝酒过量而出了丑。

2. So it's you that have disgraced the family!
    原来是你丢了全家的面子!

名词

1. He was in disgrace because he had lied.
    他很丢脸,因为他说了谎。

2. The dirty classrooms are a disgrace to the school.
    骯脏的教室是学校的耻辱。

3. The dirty walls are a disgrace to the school.
    这些肮脏的墙壁是学校的耻辱。

disgrace 网络解释

disgrace

1. 耻辱:<<耻辱>>(Disgrace)根据JM.柯慈(JM Coetzee)的布克奖获奖作品改编,揭示了后种族隔离时代的社会习俗;但这部电影因为南非无法筹资而由澳大利亚人制作. 不过,<<砰砰俱乐部>>(The Bang Bang Club)或许可以让当地重新感觉一点骄傲,

2. 不名誉:光(Light)的真正意思不是神圣(Blessed)、洁净(Spotless)、名誉(Honor),而是污秽(Filthy)、不洁(Defiler)及不名誉(Disgrace)「可不要以为那次之后只剩下你就可以获胜,我想你应该知道,

3. (丢脸):牐爏candal(丑闻) | 牐燿isgrace(丢脸) | 牐燿ishonor(耻辱)

disgrace 词典解释

1. 丢脸;耻辱;不光彩
    If you say that someone is in disgrace, you are emphasizing that other people disapprove of them and do not respect them because of something that they have done.

    e.g. His vice president also had to resign in disgrace...
           他的副总统也被迫不光彩地辞去职务。
    e.g. She has brought disgrace upon womankind.
           她的行为让女性蒙羞。

2. 丢脸的事;不名誉的事
    If you say that something is a disgrace, you are emphasizing that it is very bad or wrong, and that you find it completely unacceptable.

    e.g. The way the sales were handled was a complete disgrace...
           这种销售手段为人所不齿。
    e.g. The national airline is a disgrace.
           国家航空公司真可耻。

3. 让人蒙羞的人
    You say that someone is a disgrace to someone else when you want to emphasize that their behaviour causes the other person to feel ashamed.

    e.g. Republican leaders called him a disgrace to the party...
           共和党领导人称他是全党的耻辱。
    e.g. What went on was a scandal. It was a disgrace to Britain.
           发生的一切是个丑闻,是给英国抹黑。

4. 911查询·英语单词

4. 使丢脸;使受辱
    If you say that someone disgraces someone else, you are emphasizing that their behaviour causes the other person to feel ashamed.

    e.g. I have disgraced my family's name...
           我让家人蒙羞。
    e.g. I've disgraced myself by the actions I've taken.
           我的行为让我颜面尽失。

disgrace 单语例句

1. According to an old saying, disgrace comes to people not by force but through invitation.

2. disgrace的解释

2. The China Youth Daily called the coercion a " shocking disgrace " exposing officials'failure to enforce labor laws.

3. But Lee flunked his college entrance exams twice a colossal disgrace for his family and a failure that dooms many Taiwan youth to mediocre careers.

4. 911查询·英语单词

4. They sought to convert to Islam, something viewed as a disgrace in their community.

5. The main reason was the concern for other people's attitude and fear of disgrace, the counselor said.

6. The fraud turned a revered money man into an overnight global disgrace whose name became synonymous with the current economic meltdown.

7. But the strategy didn't work, and ultimately the Soviets had to pull out in disgrace.

8. Making no specific mention of the incident that triggered his disgrace in his remarks, he spoke for under six minutes and took no questions.

9. New Orleans'top emergency management official called that effort a " national disgrace " and questioned when reinforcements would actually reach the increasingly lawless city.

10. Frei was sent home in disgrace from Euro 2004 after spitting at an opponent, but has now more than redeemed himself in the national eye.

disgrace 英英释义

911查询·英语单词

noun

1. a state of dishonor

    e.g. one mistake brought shame to all his family
           suffered the ignominy of being sent to prison

    Synonym: shame ignominy

verb

1. damage the reputation of

    e.g. This newspaper story discredits the politicians

    Synonym: discredit

2. reduce in worth or character, usually verbally

    e.g. She tends to put down younger women colleagues
           His critics took him down after the lecture

    Synonym: take down degrade demean put down

3. bring shame or dishonor upon

    e.g. he dishonored his family by committing a serious crime

    Synonym: dishonor dishonour attaint shame

以上为单词解释
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