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1 déshonorer
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2 déshonneur
déshonneur [dezɔnœʀ]masculine noun* * *dezɔnœʀnom masculin disgrace* * *dezɔnœʀ nmdishonour Grande-Bretagne dishonor USA disgrace* * *déshonneur nm disgrace; il est le déshonneur de la famille he is the black sheep of the family.[dezɔnɶr] nom masculin2. [honte] disgrace -
3 déshonorer
déshonorer [dezɔnɔʀe]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb2. reflexive verb► se déshonorer to disgrace o.s.* * *dezɔnɔʀe
1.
1) ( apporter le déshonneur à) to bring disgrace on [personne, famille]; to bring [something] into disrepute [doctrine, pays]2) (dated) ( séduire) to dishonour [BrE] [femme, jeune fille]
2.
se déshonorer verbe pronominal to disgrace oneself* * *dezɔnɔʀe vtto dishonour Grande-Bretagne to dishonor USA to bring disgrace on* * *déshonorer verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( apporter le déshonneur à) to bring disgrace on [personne, famille]; to bring [sth] into disrepute [doctrine, pays]; se sentir déshonoré to feel disgraced; être déshonoré to be in disgrace;3 †( séduire) to dishonourGB [femme, jeune fille].B se déshonorer vpr to disgrace oneself.[dezɔnɔre] verbe transitif2. (littéraire) [abuser de - femme, jeune fille] to ruin3. (littéraire) [lieu, monument] to spoil ou to ruin the look of————————se déshonorer verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi) -
4 ignominie
iɲɔmini1) ( état) ignominy2) (acte, parole) dreadful thing* * *iɲɔmini nf1) (= honte) disgrace2) (= acte) appalling act* * *ignominie nf1 ( déshonneur) ignominy; l'ignominie de l'exil the ignominy of exile; se couvrir d'ignominie to bring dishonourGB upon oneself;2 ( caractère ignoble) l'ignominie de cette accusation this ignominious accusation; traiter qn avec ignominie to treat sb abominably;3 ( acte honteux) dreadful thing; elle a commis des ignominies she did some dreadful things; c'est une ignominie! it's an outrage![iɲɔmini] nom féminincommettre une ignominie to behave ignominiously ou disgracefully[parole] ignominydire des ignominies to say disgraceful ou hateful things -
5 outrage
outrage [utʀaʒ]masculine noun• faire outrage à [+ réputation, mémoire] to dishonour (Brit) to dishonor (US) ; [+ pudeur, honneur] to outrage* * *utʀaʒnom masculin insultfaire outrage à — to be an insult to [personne, réputation, mémoire]; to be an affront to [raison, morale]
Phrasal Verbs:* * *utʀaʒ nm1) (= affront, offense) insultfaire subir les derniers outrages à une femme > lit — to ravish a woman lit
2) DROIT* * *outrage nm insult; faire outrage à to be an insult to [personne, réputation, mémoire]; to be an affront to [raison, morale].outrage à agent verbal assault of a policeman; outrage aux bonnes mœurs affront to public decency; outrage à magistrat contempt ¢ of court; outrage à la pudeur indecency ¢.[utraʒ] nom masculin1. [offense] insult2. DROIT -
6 déshonneur
disgrace, dishonour
См. также в других словарях:
Dishonour Bright — is a 1936 British comedy film directed by and starring Tom Walls. It also featured Eugene Pallette, Betty Stockfeld and Diana Churchill and was based on a story by Ben Travers. Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 References … Wikipedia
dishonour — dis‧hon‧our [dɪsˈɒnə ǁ ˈɑːnər] , dishonor verb [transitive] 1. BANKING if a bank dishonours a cheque, it refuses to pay out money for it, usually because the person who has written it does not have enough money in their account: • The law is that … Financial and business terms
dishonour — (US dishonor) ► NOUN ▪ a state of shame or disgrace. ► VERB 1) bring dishonour to. 2) fail to honour (an agreement, cheque, etc.) … English terms dictionary
dishonour — British spelling of DISHONOR (Cf. dishonor); also see OR (Cf. or). Related: Dishonoured; dishonouring; dishonourable; dishonourably … Etymology dictionary
dishonour — I UK [dɪsˈɒnə(r)] / US [dɪsˈɑnər] noun [uncountable] a state in which people no longer respect you because of something bad that you have done Their motto was Death before Dishonour . bring dishonour on/upon: What she had done had brought… … English dictionary
dishonour — n. 1) to bring dishonour on, to 2) a dishonour to * * * [dɪs ɒnə] to a dishonour to to bring dishonour on … Combinatory dictionary
dishonour — [[t]dɪsɒ̱nə(r)[/t]] dishonours, dishonouring, dishonoured (in AM, use dishonor) 1) VERB If you dishonour someone, you behave in a way that damages their good reputation. [FORMAL] [V n] It would dishonour my family if I didn t wear the veil. 2) N… … English dictionary
dishonour — Dishonor Dis*hon or (d[i^]s*[o^]n [ e]r or d[i^]z*[o^]n [ e]r), n. [OE. deshonour, dishonour, OF. deshonor, deshonur, F. d[ e]shonneur; pref. des (L. dis ) + honor, honur, F. honneur, fr. L. honor. See {Honor}.] [Written also {dishonour}.] [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
dishonour — dis|hon|our1 BrE dishonor AmE [dısˈɔnə US ˈa:nər] n [U] loss of respect from other people, because you have behaved in a morally unacceptable way ≠ ↑honour ▪ You ve brought enough dishonour on your family already without causing any more trouble … Dictionary of contemporary English
dishonour — 1 BrE, dishonor AmE noun (U) formal loss of respect from other people because you have behaved in a morally unacceptable way: bring dishonour on: You ve brought enough dishonour on your family already without causing any more trouble. 2 BrE,,… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
dishonour — 1) To fail to pay a cheque when the account of the drawer does not have sufficient funds to cover it. When a bank dishonours a cheque it marks it ‘refer to drawer’ and returns it to the payee through his or her bank. 2) To fail to accept a bill… … Accounting dictionary