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1 deshonrar
v.1 to dishonor.con su conducta deshonra a toda la familia he is dishonoring the entire family with his conductElsa deshonró a su familia Elsa dishonored her family.2 to trample on, to tread on.Elsa deshonró su reputación Elsa trampled on her good name.3 to bring shame on, to shame.Elsa deshonró a sus padres Elsa brought shame on her parents.* * *1 (gen) to dishonour (US dishonor), disgrace2 (injuriar) to insult, defame3 (a una mujer) to dishonour (US dishonor)* * *verbto dishonor, disgrace* * *VT1) [+ familia, compañeros] to dishonour, dishonor (EEUU), disgrace2) (=afrentar) to insult3) euf [+ mujer] to dishonour, dishonor (EEUU)* * ** * *= taint, vilify, stigmatise [stigmatize, -USA], besmirch, bring + Nombre + into disrepute, disgrace, defile.Ex. This article shows how the dowdy and boring image of the stereotypical librarian as presented in fiction, taints the portrayal of all who work in libraries.Ex. Robert Kent's sole agenda is to attack Cuba and vilify the Cuban library community while supporting the US government's interventionist destabilization policies.Ex. Findings reaffirm that television stigmatises the occupation of business, independently of economic factors.Ex. the gulag was an atrocious system of incarceration and forced labor that had little to do with correction, that poisoned society, and that besmirched Soviet communism.Ex. This article considers the danger that inherent bias in such research might bring library and information science research into disrepute.Ex. The League of Nations was a comically ham-handed debacle which collapsed in complete failure, disgracing all who were associated with it.Ex. No person shall throw any waste, building debris or vehicle scrap into the public domain or defile the public domain.----* deshonrar la reputación = besmirch + reputation.* * ** * *= taint, vilify, stigmatise [stigmatize, -USA], besmirch, bring + Nombre + into disrepute, disgrace, defile.Ex: This article shows how the dowdy and boring image of the stereotypical librarian as presented in fiction, taints the portrayal of all who work in libraries.
Ex: Robert Kent's sole agenda is to attack Cuba and vilify the Cuban library community while supporting the US government's interventionist destabilization policies.Ex: Findings reaffirm that television stigmatises the occupation of business, independently of economic factors.Ex: the gulag was an atrocious system of incarceration and forced labor that had little to do with correction, that poisoned society, and that besmirched Soviet communism.Ex: This article considers the danger that inherent bias in such research might bring library and information science research into disrepute.Ex: The League of Nations was a comically ham-handed debacle which collapsed in complete failure, disgracing all who were associated with it.Ex: No person shall throw any waste, building debris or vehicle scrap into the public domain or defile the public domain.* deshonrar la reputación = besmirch + reputation.* * *deshonrar [A1 ]vt1 ‹familia/patria› to dishonor*, disgrace, bring dishonor* o disgrace o shame ontrabajar no deshonra a nadie working is nothing to be ashamed of2 ‹mujer› to dishonor** * *
deshonrar ( conjugate deshonrar) verbo transitivo ‹familia/patria› to dishonor( conjugate dishonor), disgrace;
‹ mujer› to dishonor( conjugate dishonor)
deshonrar verbo transitivo
1 to dishonour, US dishonor
2 (a la familia, etc) to bring disgrace on
' deshonrar' also found in these entries:
English:
disgrace
- dishonor
- dishonour
- shame
- blacken
- taint
* * *deshonrar vt1. [injuriar] to dishonour;con su conducta deshonra a toda la familia his behaviour is bringing disgrace upon the entire family2. [mujer] to dishonour* * *v/t dishonor, Brdishonour* * *deshonrar vt: to dishonor, to disgrace -
2 avergonzar
v.1 to shame.el comportamiento de mi marido me avergüenza I feel embarrassed by my husomebodyand's behavior2 to embarrass, to bring to shame, to shame, to be a reproach to.Elsa deshonró a sus padres Elsa brought shame on her parents.3 to feel embarrassed, to get embarrassed, to feel embarrassment.* * *(in stressed syllables o changes to ue and g to gü; z changes to c before e)Present IndicativePast Indicativeavergoncé, avergonzaste, avergonzó, avergonzamos, avergonzasteis, avergonzaron.Present SubjunctiveImperativeavergüenza (tú), avergüence (él/Vd.), avergoncemos (nos.), avergonzad (vos.), avergüencen (ellos/Vds.).* * *verb1) to shame, put shame2) embarrass•* * *1.VT (=hacer pasar vergüenza) to shame, put to shame; (=poner en un aprieto) to embarrass2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( por algo reprensible)¿no te avergüenza salir así a la calle? — aren't you ashamed to go out looking like that?
b) ( en situación embarazosa) to embarrass2.avergonzarse v pron to be ashamed (of oneself)* * *= embarrass, put + Nombre + to shame.Ex. Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.Ex. I will rescue the lame and gather those who have been scattered, I will give them praise and honor in every land where they were put to shame.----* avergonzarse = become + ashamed.* barato pero sin avergonzarse de ello = cheap and cheerful.* sin avergonzarse = unashamed.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( por algo reprensible)¿no te avergüenza salir así a la calle? — aren't you ashamed to go out looking like that?
b) ( en situación embarazosa) to embarrass2.avergonzarse v pron to be ashamed (of oneself)* * *= embarrass, put + Nombre + to shame.Ex: Native American children should have books that do not demean or embarrass them or their heritage nor put them on a pedestal.
Ex: I will rescue the lame and gather those who have been scattered, I will give them praise and honor in every land where they were put to shame.* avergonzarse = become + ashamed.* barato pero sin avergonzarse de ello = cheap and cheerful.* sin avergonzarse = unashamed.* * *avergonzar [ A13 ]vt1(por algo reprensible): ¿cómo no te avergüenza salir así a la calle? aren't you ashamed to go out looking like that?, you should be ashamed to go out looking like that2 (en una situación embarazosa) to embarrass, make … feel embarrassedto be ashamed (of oneself) avergonzarse DE algo to be ashamed OF sthse avergonzó de haberle contestado así she was ashamed of herself for answering back like that* * *
avergonzar ( conjugate avergonzar) verbo transitivoa) ( por algo reprensible):◊ ¿no te avergüenza salir así a la calle? aren't you ashamed to go out looking like that?
avergonzarse verbo pronominal
to be ashamed (of oneself);
avergonzarse de algo to be ashamed of sth;
avergonzar verbo transitivo to shame
' avergonzar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
apurar
- avergüenza
English:
embarrass
- mortify
- shame
- show up
* * *♦ vt1. [deshonrar, humillar] to shame2. [abochornar] to embarrass;el comportamiento de mi marido me avergüenza I feel embarrassed by my husband's behaviour* * *v/t1 ( aborchornar) embarrass2:* * *avergonzar {9} vtapenar: to shame, to embarrass* * *avergonzar vb1. (causar vergüenza) to make feel ashamed2. (turbar) to embarrass
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