-
1 affront
affront [afʀɔ̃]masculine noun( = insulte) affront* * *afʀɔ̃nom masculin affront (à to)* * *afʀɔ̃ nm* * *affront nm affront (à to); rougir sous l'affront to blush at the affront; faire à qn l'affront de faire to affront ou insult sb by doing; il m'a fait l'affront de refuser mon invitation he insulted me by refusing my invitation.[afrɔ̃] nom masculinessuyer ou subir un affront to be affronted ou offended -
2 affront
[əˈfrant]1. nounan insult, usually one made in public:إهَانَة عَلَنِيَّهHis remarks were obviously intended as an affront to her.
2. verbto insult or offend:يُهِين عَلَانِيَّةWe were affronted by the offhand way in which they treated us.
-
3 häväistys
yks.nom. häväistys; yks.gen. häväistyksen; yks.part. häväistystä; yks.ill. häväistykseen; mon.gen. häväistysten häväistyksien; mon.part. häväistyksiä; mon.ill. häväistyksiinaffront (noun)blasphemy (noun)contumely (noun)ignominy (noun)indignity (noun)insult (noun)opprobrium (noun)profanation (noun)scandal (noun)shame (noun)violation (noun)* * *• contumely• disgrace• dishonour• disrespect• blasphemy• offence• contempt• insult• insolence• injury• indignity• ignominy• humiliation• opprobrious• abuse• violation• shame• scandal• profanation• affront• outrage• opprobrium• reproach -
4 solvaus
yks.nom. solvaus; yks.gen. solvauksen; yks.part. solvausta; yks.ill. solvaukseen; mon.gen. solvausten solvauksien; mon.part. solvauksia; mon.ill. solvauksiinabuse (noun)affront (noun)insult (noun)slander (noun)vituperation (noun)* * *• offence• vituperation• slight• outrage• insult• insolence• affront• abuse• slander -
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 agravio
m.1 offense, insult (ofensa).2 wrong (perjuicio).agravio comparativo unequal treatment3 affront.4 tort, delict, breach of duty, maleficium.5 damage, damage due to a court sentence.pres.indicat.1st person singular (yo) present indicative of spanish verb: agraviar.* * *1 offence, insult* * *noun m.1) offense, insult2) grievance* * *SM (=daño) wrong, injury; (=insulto) offence, offense (EEUU), insult; (Jur) grievance, injusticeagravio comparativo — inequality, resentment arising from inequality
* * ** * *= tort, wrong, wrongdoing, loss of face, outrage.Ex. Librarians have traditionally been concerned with giving rather than selling information and information supplied negligently is dealt with by the law of torts: civil wrongs independent of contract.Ex. Librarians have traditionally been concerned with giving rather than selling information and information supplied negligently is dealt with by the law of torts: civil wrongs independent of contract.Ex. His doctrine that even venial wrongdoing is worse than any natural calamity implies that we ought to refrain from such wrongdoing even if calamity results.Ex. Males are primarily concerned with a loss of face when confronted with a jealousy situation, while females are concerned with the possible loss of a partner.Ex. The outrage expressed by users of the Internet brought about the passing an act aimed at ridding the Internet of pornography.----* reparar un agravio = right + a wrong, right + an injustice, make + amends (for/to).* * ** * *= tort, wrong, wrongdoing, loss of face, outrage.Ex: Librarians have traditionally been concerned with giving rather than selling information and information supplied negligently is dealt with by the law of torts: civil wrongs independent of contract.
Ex: Librarians have traditionally been concerned with giving rather than selling information and information supplied negligently is dealt with by the law of torts: civil wrongs independent of contract.Ex: His doctrine that even venial wrongdoing is worse than any natural calamity implies that we ought to refrain from such wrongdoing even if calamity results.Ex: Males are primarily concerned with a loss of face when confronted with a jealousy situation, while females are concerned with the possible loss of a partner.Ex: The outrage expressed by users of the Internet brought about the passing an act aimed at ridding the Internet of pornography.* reparar un agravio = right + a wrong, right + an injustice, make + amends (for/to).* * *( frml)considero esas palabras un agravio a mi persona I take those words to be o as a personal insult2 ( Der) grievance* * *
Del verbo agraviar: ( conjugate agraviar)
agravio es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente indicativo
agravió es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) pretérito indicativo
Multiple Entries:
agraviar
agravio
agraviar verbo transitivo to offend, insult
agravio sustantivo masculino offense, insult
' agravio' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ofensa
- reparar
- satisfacer
English:
injure
- wrong
* * *agravio nm1. [ofensa] offence, insult;sus palabras fueron un agravio a la institución her words were an insult to the institution2. [perjuicio] wrong;eso sería un agravio comparativo that would be unfair (treatment)* * *m offense, Broffence* * *agravio nminjuria: affront, offense, insult -
7 atentado
m.attempted murder, felonious intent, attack, attempt.past part.past participle of spanish verb: atentar.* * *1 (ataque) attack, assault2 (afrenta) affront\atentado terrorista terrorist attack* * *noun m.attack, attempt* * *1.ADJ (=prudente) prudent, cautious; (=moderado) moderate2.SM (=ofensa) offence, felony (EEUU); (=crimen) outrage, crime; (=ataque) assault, attack; (Pol) attemptatentado a o contra la vida de algn — attempt on sb's life
atentado contra el pudor, atentado contra la honra — indecent assault
atentado suicida — suicide bombing, suicide attack
* * *a) ( ataque)b) ( afrenta)atentado a or contra algo — a honor/dignidad/moral affront to something
* * *= bombing, assassination attempt.Ex. Despite damage from bombing, triple digit inflation, and staff shortages, many libraries functioned throughout the conflict.Ex. Victim of an apparent assassination attempt, his face was left permanently disfigured and pockmarked.----* atentado contra la dignidad humana = assault on people's dignity, assault on human dignity.* atentado contra la libertad = war on liberty.* atentado golpista = attempted coup, coup attempt.* atentado terrorista = terrorist attack, terror attack.* * *a) ( ataque)b) ( afrenta)atentado a or contra algo — a honor/dignidad/moral affront to something
* * *= bombing, assassination attempt.Ex: Despite damage from bombing, triple digit inflation, and staff shortages, many libraries functioned throughout the conflict.
Ex: Victim of an apparent assassination attempt, his face was left permanently disfigured and pockmarked.* atentado contra la dignidad humana = assault on people's dignity, assault on human dignity.* atentado contra la libertad = war on liberty.* atentado golpista = attempted coup, coup attempt.* atentado terrorista = terrorist attack, terror attack.* * *1llevaron a cabo un atentado contra el presidente they carried out an assassination attempt on the president, they tried to assassinate ( o shoot etc) the presidentun atentado contra la seguridad del Estado a threat to national security2 (afrenta) atentado CONTRA or A algo:su manera de vestir es un atentado a or contra la moral the way she dresses is an affront to moralityesto constituye un atentado a or contra su dignidad y libertad this constitutes an attack on his dignity and freedom* * *
Del verbo atentar: ( conjugate atentar)
atentado es:
el participio
Multiple Entries:
atentado
atentar
atentado sustantivo masculinoa) ( ataque):
un atentado contra el presidente an assassination attempt on the president
atentar ( conjugate atentar) verbo intransitivo:
atentado contra la seguridad del Estado to threaten national security
atentado sustantivo masculino attack
un atentado contra la intimidad, an outrage against privacy
atentado terrorista, terrorist attack
atentar verbo intransitivo esta mañana atentaron contra la vida de un famoso escritor, there was an attempt on a famous writer's life this morning
' atentado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
indemne
- reivindicación
- respiración
- terrorista
- brutal
- costar
- frustrado
- reivindicar
- repudiar
- responsabilizar
- responsable
- sufrir
English:
attack
- attempt
- bombing
- claim
- offense
* * *atentado nmun atentado con bomba a bomb attack, a bombing;un atentado contra el presidente an attempt on the president's life2. [afronta] crime;la construcción de la cementera es un atentado contra el medio ambiente the building of the cement factory is a crime against the environment;la ley es un atentado contra la libertad de expresión the law constitutes an attack on freedom of expression* * *m attack (contra, a on)* * *atentado nm: attack, assault* * *atentado n1. (ataque) attack2. (intento de asesinato) attempt -
8 ofensa
f.1 offense.una ofensa a la dignidad humana an offense o insult to human dignityuna ofensa a la buena educación an affront to good manners2 slight, insult (injuria).no lo tomes como una ofensa personal don't take it as a personal insult o offense3 misdemeanor, illegality, transgression, trespass.* * *1 offence* * *noun f.* * *SF1) (=insulto) offence, offense (EEUU)2) (=desprecio) slight* * ** * *= offence [offense, -USA], insult, offense [offence, -UK], harmdoing, slap in the face, diss, slur.Ex. The study suggests a simple publicity campaign with particular emphasis on the penalty with goes with the offence.Ex. Some student users resorted to using an online conferencing system as the medium for insults and invective aimed at each other.Ex. The author categorizes an impeachable offense as one that threatens the safety of the country, either as treason or bribery.Ex. The act of ' harmdoing' is defined, & the impact of legal structures on the behavior of the harmdoer & victim is examined.Ex. To reward him with a major committee chairmanship would be a slap in the face of millions of Americans who want to see real change in our country.Ex. I think the disses come from frustration with the way his work was handled rather than from desperation.Ex. I can also remember a time when slurs were uttered about Jewish people and if you didn't laugh you were considered a wet blanket.----* causa de la ofensa = offending.* * ** * *= offence [offense, -USA], insult, offense [offence, -UK], harmdoing, slap in the face, diss, slur.Ex: The study suggests a simple publicity campaign with particular emphasis on the penalty with goes with the offence.
Ex: Some student users resorted to using an online conferencing system as the medium for insults and invective aimed at each other.Ex: The author categorizes an impeachable offense as one that threatens the safety of the country, either as treason or bribery.Ex: The act of ' harmdoing' is defined, & the impact of legal structures on the behavior of the harmdoer & victim is examined.Ex: To reward him with a major committee chairmanship would be a slap in the face of millions of Americans who want to see real change in our country.Ex: I think the disses come from frustration with the way his work was handled rather than from desperation.Ex: I can also remember a time when slurs were uttered about Jewish people and if you didn't laugh you were considered a wet blanket.* causa de la ofensa = offending.* * *(agravio) insultlo ha tomado como una ofensa personal she has taken it as a personal insult o slightno le hagas la ofensa de darle propina don't insult him by giving him a tip* * *
ofensa sustantivo femenino ( agravio) insult
ofensa sustantivo femenino offence, US offense
(insulto) insult, affront: el programa fue una ofensa a la democracia, the programme was an affront to democracy
' ofensa' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
bofetada
- constitutiva
- constitutivo
- reparar
- vilipendio
- reparación
English:
affront
- insult
- offence
* * *ofensa nf1. [acción] offence, insult;una ofensa a la dignidad humana an offence o insult to human dignity;una ofensa a la buena educación an affront to good manners2. [injuria] slight, insult;no lo tomes como una ofensa personal don't take it as a personal insult o offence* * *f insult* * *ofensa nf: offense, insult* * *ofensa n offence -
9 offense
offense [ɔfɑ̃s]feminine noun( = affront) insult* * *ɔfɑ̃s1) ( affront) insult2) Religion trespass* * *ɔfɑ̃s nf(= affront) insult, RELIGION (= péché) trespass* * *offense nf1 ( affront) insult; pardonner/venger une offense to forgive/to avenge an insult; faire offense à qn to offend sb;2 Relig trespass; ‘pardonnez-nous nos offenses’ ‘forgive us our trespasses’.offense envers un chef d'État contempt of the head of state.[ɔfɑ̃s] nom féminin1. [affront] insultfaire offense à to offend, to give offence tosoit dit sans offense, tu n'es plus tout jeune non plus no offence meant, but you're not that young either3. DROIT -
10 offensé
offense [ɔfɑ̃s]feminine noun( = affront) insult* * *ɔfɑ̃s1) ( affront) insult2) Religion trespass* * *ɔfɑ̃s nf(= affront) insult, RELIGION (= péché) trespass* * *offense nf1 ( affront) insult; pardonner/venger une offense to forgive/to avenge an insult; faire offense à qn to offend sb;2 Relig trespass; ‘pardonnez-nous nos offenses’ ‘forgive us our trespasses’.offense envers un chef d'État contempt of the head of state.air offensé offended ou outraged look————————, offensée [ɔfɑ̃se] nom masculin, nom féminin(soutenu) offended ou injured party -
11 injure
injure [ɛ̃ʒyʀ]feminine nouna. ( = insulte) term of abuse* * *ɛ̃ʒyʀ* * *ɛ̃ʒyʀ1. nfIl a pris ça comme une injure. — He took this as an insult.
2. injures nfplabuse no pl insultslancer des injures à quelqu'un — to hurl abuse at somebody, to hurl insults at somebody
* * *injure nf1 ( insulte) abuse ¢; couvrir qn d'injures to heap abuse on sb; proférer des injures to pour out abuse;2 ( offense) injury (à to); faire injure à qn to insult sb;3 Jur être inculpé d'injure à qn to be charged with abusing sb;[ɛ̃ʒyr] nom fémininun chapelet d'injures a stream of abuse ou insultsaccabler ou couvrir quelqu'un d'injures to heap abuse on somebody -
12 usafihi
------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] arrogance[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] safihi V, (Arabic)[Swahili Example] alisema kwa usafihi na ufisadi [Muk]------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] conceit[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] safihi V, (Arabic)------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] insolence[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] safihi V, (Arabic)------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] pride[Part of Speech] noun[Class] 14[Derived Word] safihi V, (Arabic)------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] abuse[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] affront[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] arrogance[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] impudence[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] presumption[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------[Swahili Word] usafihi[English Word] pride[Part of Speech] noun------------------------------------------------------------ -
13 gifle
gifle [ʒifl]feminine noun* * *ʒifl1) ( claque) slap in the faceflanquer (colloq) une paire de gifles à quelqu'un — to clip somebody around the ears (colloq)
2) ( affront) slap in the face* * *ʒifl nf* * *gifle nf1 ( claque) slap in the face; donner or coller○ une gifle à qn to slap sb in the face; donner une bonne gifle à qn to whack sb; flanquer○ une paire de gifles à qn to clip sb around the ears○; recevoir or prendre○ une paire de gifles to get a clip around the ears○;2 ( affront) slap in the face (pour for).[ʒifl] nom féminin1. [coup] slap (in the face)donner une gifle à quelqu'un to slap somebody's face, to box somebody's ears -
14 vivre
vivre [vivʀ]➭ TABLE 461. intransitive verba. to live• quand l'ambulance est arrivée, il vivait encore he was still alive when the ambulance arrived• vivre à Londres/en France to live in London/in France• vivre dans le passé/dans la crainte to live in the past/in fear• être facile/difficile à vivre to be easy/difficult to get on with• vivre de laitages/de rentes to live on dairy produce/a private income• travailler/écrire pour vivre to work/write for a living• faire vivre qn [personne] to support sb• elle ne vit plus depuis que son fils est pilote she's been living on her nerves since her son became a pilotb. [idée, rue, paysage] to be alive2. transitive verba. ( = passer) to spendb. [+ événement, guerre] to live through3. plural masculine noun* * *vivʀ
1.
1) ( connaître) to live through [époque, période]; to go through [heures difficiles, enfer]; to experience [amour, passion]2) ( ressentir) to cope with [divorce, échec]
2.
verbe intransitif1) Biologie ( être vivant) to livevivre vieux/centenaire — to live to a great age/to be a hundred
cesser de vivre — euph to pass away
vive moi/nous! — three cheers for me/us!
2) ( habiter) to liveêtre facile à vivre — [conjoint] to be easy to live with; [ami] to be easy to get on with
3) ( exister) [personne] to liveapprendre à vivre à quelqu'un — (colloq) to teach somebody some manners (colloq)
savoir vivre — ( profiter de la vie) to know how to enjoy life
4) ( survivre) [personne] to live5) ( durer) [relation, mode] to lastavoir vécu — [personne] to have seen a great deal of life; ( être usé) hum to have had its day
6) ( être animé) [ville, rue] to be full of life••* * *vivʀ1. vi1) (= résider) to liveJ'aimerais vivre à l'étranger. — I'd like to live abroad.
Je vis en Écosse. — I live in Scotland.
Il vit chez ses parents. — He lives with his parents.
Il a vécu à Paris pendant dix ans. — He lived in Paris for ten years.
2) (= être vivant) to be aliveavoir vécu; Ce régime a vécu. — This regime has had its day.
3) (= exister, mener son existence) to liveOn vit de plus en plus longtemps. — People are living longer and longer.
se laisser vivre — to let o.s. go
ne plus vivre (= être anxieux) — to live on one's nerves
Il a vécu. — He has seen life.
4) (= subsister) to liveIls avaient à peine de quoi vivre. — They had barely enough to live on.
vivre de [salaire, allocations] — to live on
vivre mal (= chichement) — to have a meagre existence
2. vt1) [vie] to live, [aventures] to go through, [temps] to spendIls y ont vécu des jours heureux. — They spent some happy times there.
2) (= ressentir)Il a très mal vécu son licenciement. — He took his redundancy very hard.
3. nm4. vivres nmplprovisions, food supplies* * *vivre verb table: vivreA vtr1 ( connaître) to live through [époque, période]; to go through [heures difficiles, cauchemar, enfer]; to experience [amour, passion]; vivre son mariage comme un sacrifice to view one's marriage as self-sacrifice; être vécu comme un affront to be taken as an insult; vivre une vie tranquille/agitée to lead a quiet/hectic life; la vie vaut d'être vécue life is worth living; vivre sa vie to lead one's own life;2 ( ressentir) to cope with [divorce, échec, changement]; comment as-tu vécu votre séparation? how did you cope with your separation?; vivre sa foi to put one's faith into practiceGB?B vi1 Biol ( être vivant) [personne, animal, plante] to live; vivre longtemps/vieux/centenaire to live for a long time/to a great age/to be a hundred; cesser de vivre euph to pass away; vive la révolution/le président! long live the revolution/the president!; vive(nt) les vacances! three cheers for the holidays GB ou the vacation US!; vive la vie! life is wonderful!; vive moi/nous! three cheers for me/us!; vive Paul! hurray for Paul!;2 ( habiter) [personne, animal, plante] to live; vivre à la campagne/en démocratie to live in the country/in a democracy; il vit avec quelqu'un he's living with somebody; vivre à cinq dans une chambre to live five to a room; être facile/difficile à vivre [conjoint, concubin] to be easy/difficult to live with; [ami, collègue] to be easy/difficult to get on with; vivre les uns sur les autres to live on top of each other;3 ( exister) [personne] to live; vivre en ermite to live like a hermit; vivre dans la crainte/pour ses enfants to live in fear/for one's children; vivre avec son temps to move with the times; vivre à contre-courant to go one's own way; vivre en pyjama to live in one's pyjamas GB ou pajamas US; se laisser vivre to take things easy; apprendre à qn à vivre○ to teach sb some manners○; savoir vivre ( profiter de la vie) to know how to enjoy life; ( être poli) to know how things are done;4 ( survivre) [personne] to live; bien vivre to live well; vivre de peu to live on very little; de quoi vit-elle? what does she live on?; avoir de quoi vivre to have enough to live on; vivre avec presque rien/sur son capital/de la charité to live on next to nothing/on one's capital/on charity; vivre de légumes to live on vegetables; vivre sur sa réputation to live on one's reputation; vivre de ses rentes to have a private income; faire vivre qn ( matériellement) to keep sb; vivre aux dépens de qn to live off sb; vivre d'espoir to live in hope; qu'est-ce qui te fait vivre? what keeps you going?;5 ( durer) [relation, mode, idéologie] to last; le gouvernement ne vivra pas longtemps the government won't last long; avoir vécu [personne] to have seen a great deal of life; hum ( être usé) [objet, idée] to have had its day; mes chaussures ont vécu my shoes have had their day; leur souvenir vivra dans nos mémoires their memory will live on in our hearts;6 ( être animé) [ville, rue] to be full of life.C se vivre vpr ( être ressenti) le divorce se vit souvent très mal divorce is often very hard to cope with.D vivres nmpl1 ( nourriture) food, supplies;2 ( moyens de subsistance) couper les vivres à qn to cut off sb's allowance.le vivre et le couvert board and lodging; vivre de l'air du temps to live on air; vivre sur un grand pied to live in great style; qui vivra verra what will be will be.I[vivr] nom masculin————————vivres nom masculin plurielII[vivr] verbe intransitif[cellule, plante] to livevivre vieux ou longtemps to live to a great age ou ripe old age2. [mener une existence] to livevivre à l'heure de l'Europe/du XXIe siècle to live in the world of the European community/of the 21st centuryvivre dans le luxe/l'angoisse to live in luxury/anxietyne vivre que pour la musique/sa famille to live only for music/one's familyil fait bon vivre ici life is good ou it's a good life herea. [on est inquiet] we're worried sickb. [on est harassé] this isn't a life, this isn't what you can call livinga. [il est impoli] he has no mannersb. [il est trop nerveux] he doesn't know how to enjoy life3. [résider] to livevivre au Brésil/dans un château to live in Brazil/in a castlevivre dans une ou en communauté to live communally ou in a communitya. [maritalement] to live with somebodyb. [en amis] to share ou to live with somebodyvivre ensemble [couple non marié] to live togetherêtre facile à vivre to be easygoing ou easy to get on with4. [subsister] to livevivre sur un seul salaire to live ou to exist on just one salarya. [personne] to provide a living for ou to support a familyb. [commerce] to provide a living for a familyvivre bien/chichement to have a good/poor standard of livingils vivaient de la cueillette et de la chasse they lived on what they gathered and hunted ou off the landil faut bien vivre! one's got to keep the wolf from the door ou to live (somehow)!5. [se perpétuer - croyance, coutume] to be alive6. [donner l'impression de vie - sculpture, tableau]————————[vivr] verbe transitif1. [passer par - époque, événement] to live through (inseparable)vivre des temps difficiles to live through ou to experience difficult timesvivre des jours heureux/paisibles to spend one's days happily/peacefully2. [assumer - divorce, grossesse, retraite] to experienceelle a mal/bien vécu mon départ she couldn't cope/she coped well after I left3. (locution) -
15 häpeä
yks.nom. häpeä; yks.gen. häpeän; yks.part. häpeää häpeätä; yks.ill. häpeään; mon.gen. häpeiden häpeitten häpeäin; mon.part. häpeitä; mon.ill. häpeihin häpeisiindiscredit (noun)disgrace (noun)dishonour (noun)disrepute (noun)ignominy (noun)infamy (noun)opprobrium (noun)scandal (noun)shame (noun)* * *• opprobrium• degradation• abasement• abashment• affront• aspersion• reproach• defamation• stain• discredit• disfavour• disgrace• scandal• contempt• dishonor• shame• outrage• infamy• ignominy• for shame• disrepute• dishonour• slur -
16 nöyryytys
yks.nom. nöyryytys; yks.gen. nöyryytyksen; yks.part. nöyryytystä; yks.ill. nöyryytykseen; mon.gen. nöyryytysten nöyryytyksien; mon.part. nöyryytyksiä; mon.ill. nöyryytyksiinabasement (noun)humiliation (noun)indignity (noun)mortification (noun)* * *• affront• mortification• snub• shame• rebuff• offence• indignity• humiliation• dishonour• condescension• abasement• disgrace -
17 supporter
I.supporter1 [sypɔʀte]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = endurer) [+ maladie, solitude, douleur, personne] to bear ; [+ conduite] to tolerate• il va falloir le supporter pendant toute la journée ! we're going to have to put up with him all day long!• je ne supporte pas qu'on me parle sur ce ton I won't tolerate being spoken to in that tone of voice• on supporte un gilet, par ce temps you can do with a cardigan in this weatherb. ( = résister à) [+ température, conditions atmosphériques, épreuve] to withstand• il a bien/mal supporté l'opération he took the operation well/badly• je ne supporte pas les épinards ( = je ne les aime pas) I can't stand spinach ; ( = ils me rendent malade) spinach doesn't agree with mec. ( = subir) [+ frais] to bear ; [+ conséquences, affront, malheur] to sufferd. ( = servir de base à) to supporte. ( = apporter son soutien à) to support2. reflexive verb► se supporter ( = se tolérer)━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━+1! to support n'est pas la traduction la plus courante de supporter.━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━II.supporter2 [sypɔʀtεʀ]masculine noun, supporteur, -trice [sypɔʀtœʀ, tʀis]masculine noun, feminine noun* * *
I
1. sypɔʀte1) ( soutenir) [structure, colonne, pilier] to support, to bear the weight of [toiture, édifice]2) ( prendre en charge) to bear [frais, dépenses]3) ( endurer) to put up with, to endure [privations, malheur]; to put up with [personne, attitude, sarcasme]; to bear, to endure [souffrance, solitude]; [plante] to withstand [froid, chaleur]elle ne supporte pas d'attendre/la vue du sang — she can't stand waiting/the sight of blood
elle supporte bien la chaleur — she can take ou stand the heat
2.
se supporter verbe pronominal
II sypɔʀtœʀnom masculin et féminin supporter* * *
I sypɔʀtœʀ nm1) SPORT supporter, fan2) POLITIQUE (= partisan) supporter
II sypɔʀte vt1) (= endurer) [défauts, personne] to stand, to put up with, [chaleur, vin] to takeJe supporte mal la chaleur. — I can't take hot weather., I can't stand hot weather.
Je ne supporte pas l'hypocrisie. — I can't stand hypocrisy.
Elle ne supporte pas qu'on la critique. — She can't stand being criticized.
Je ne peux pas la supporter. — I can't stand her.
2) (= résister à) [chaleur] to withstand, [poids, poussée] to support3) (= souffrir) [conséquences, épreuve] to endure4) SPORT, [concurrent, équipe] to support* * *I.supporter verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( soutenir) [structure, colonne, pilier] to support, to bear the weight of [toiture, édifice];2 ( prendre en charge) to bear [frais, dépenses];3 ( endurer) to put up with, to endure [privations, malheur]; to put up with [attitude, conduite, brimade, sarcasme]; to bear, to endure [souffrance, solitude]; to put up with [personne]; elle ne supporte plus son mari she can't stand her husband any more; il ne supporte pas ce genre de musique/vantardise he can't stand this sort of music/boasting; elle ne supporte pas d'attendre/la vue du sang she can't stand waiting/the sight of blood;4 ( accepter) to put up with; elle supporte tout de lui she puts up with ou takes anything from him; je ne supporte pas qu'elle me réponde sur ce ton I won't stand for her taking that tone with me; il a mal supporté tes critiques he found your criticisms hard to take;5 ( subir sans dommages) [plante] to withstand [froid, chaleur]; [personne] elle supporte bien la chaleur she can take ou stand the heat; elle supporte mal la chaleur she can't take the heat, the heat doesn't agree with her; il ne supporte pas l'aspirine® aspirin doesn't agree with him; il a bien supporté son opération he came through the operation well; il n'a pas supporté l'opération he didn't come through the operation; ce plat supporte la chaleur this dish is heat-resistant; il a bien supporté le traitement he reacted well to the treatment; il a bien supporté le voyage he stood the journey well; il ne supporterait pas le voyage the journey would be too much for him ; il ne fait pas très froid, mais on supporte un pull it's not very cold but you need a sweater; je supporterais bien un pull I could do with a sweater.II.supporter nmf supporter.I[sypɔrte] verbe transitif2. [assumer - responsabilité, obligation] to assume[prendre en charge - dépense] to bear3. [être assujetti à - impôt] to be subject todes plantes qui supportent/ne supportent pas le froid plants that do well/badly in the coldje ne supporte pas l'alcool/la pilule drink/the pill doesn't agree with me5. [subir sans faillir - épreuve, privation] to bear, to endure, to put up with (inseparable) ; [ - insulte, menace] to bear7. [résister à] to withstandleur nouvelle voiture supporte la comparaison avec la concurrence their new car will bear ou stand comparison with anything produced by their competitors8. SPORT [encourager] to support————————se supporter verbe pronominalje ne me supporte plus en blonde/en noir blonde hair/black just isn't right for me any more————————se supporter verbe pronominal (emploi réciproque)to bear ou to stand each other————————se supporter verbe pronominal (emploi passif)II[sypɔrtɛr] nom masculin -
18 kunnianloukkaus
yks.nom. kunnianloukkaus; yks.gen. kunnianloukkauksen; yks.part. kunnianloukkausta; yks.ill. kunnianloukkaukseen; mon.gen. kunnianloukkausten kunnianloukkauksien; mon.part. kunnianloukkauksia; mon.ill. kunnianloukkauksiindefamation (noun)libel (noun)slander (noun)* * *• insult• libel• offence• affront• defamation• slander -
19 deshonra
f.1 dishonor, discredit.2 disgrace or infamy, obloquy, opprobrium.3 seduction or defloration of a woman.Tener a deshonra alguna cosa to consider a thing unworthy, and beneath the rank or character of a person4 affront, insult, ignominy, offense.pres.indicat.3rd person singular (él/ella/ello) present indicative of spanish verb: deshonrar.* * *1 dishonour (US dishonor), disgrace* * *noun f.dishonor, disgrace, shame* * *SF1) (=deshonor) dishonour, dishonor (EEUU), disgraceno es ninguna deshonra ser pobre — it is no dishonour o disgrace to be poor
2) (=vergüenza) shame3) (=acto vergonzoso) shameful act* * *a) ( vergüenza) dishonor* (frml)b) ( pérdida de la honra) dishonor** * *= stigmatisation [stigmatization, -USA], disgrace, loss of face.Ex. Reduce the fear of stigmatization of users with disabilities through outreach and publicity.Ex. Distribution of any publication that tends to expose an individual to public contempt, ridicule, or disgrace is forbidden.Ex. Males are primarily concerned with a loss of face when confronted with a jealousy situation, while females are concerned with the possible loss of a partner.* * *a) ( vergüenza) dishonor* (frml)b) ( pérdida de la honra) dishonor** * *= stigmatisation [stigmatization, -USA], disgrace, loss of face.Ex: Reduce the fear of stigmatization of users with disabilities through outreach and publicity.
Ex: Distribution of any publication that tends to expose an individual to public contempt, ridicule, or disgrace is forbidden.Ex: Males are primarily concerned with a loss of face when confronted with a jealousy situation, while females are concerned with the possible loss of a partner.* * *1 (vergüenza) dishonor* ( frml)ser pobre no es ninguna deshonra being poor is nothing to be ashamed of, it is no dishonor to be poorese chico es una deshonra para su familia that boy brings shame on his family o is a disgrace to his family2 (pérdida de la honra) dishonor** * *
Del verbo deshonrar: ( conjugate deshonrar)
deshonra es:
3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente indicativo2ª persona singular (tú) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
deshonra
deshonrar
deshonra sustantivo femenino
deshonrar ( conjugate deshonrar) verbo transitivo ‹familia/patria› to dishonor( conjugate dishonor), disgrace;
‹ mujer› to dishonor( conjugate dishonor)
deshonor m, deshonra sustantivo femenino dishonour, US dishonor
deshonrar verbo transitivo
1 to dishonour, US dishonor
2 (a la familia, etc) to bring disgrace on
' deshonra' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
deshonor
English:
dishonor
- dishonour
- shame
* * *f dishonor, Brdishonour* * *deshonra nf: dishonor, disgrace -
20 ultraje
m.1 insult.2 outrage, abuse, affront.3 indignity.4 rape.pres.subj.1st person singular (yo) Present Subjunctive of Spanish verb: ultrajar.* * *1 outrage, insult, offence (US offense)* * *noun m.outrage, insult* * *SM (=injuria) insult; (=atrocidad) outrage* * *masculino outrage, insult* * *masculino outrage, insult* * *( frml)outrage, insult* * *
Del verbo ultrajar: ( conjugate ultrajar)
ultrajé es:
1ª persona singular (yo) pretérito indicativo
ultraje es:
1ª persona singular (yo) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) presente subjuntivo3ª persona singular (él/ella/usted) imperativo
Multiple Entries:
ultrajar
ultraje
ultrajar ( conjugate ultrajar) verbo transitivo (frml) ‹ persona› to outrage, offend … deeply;
‹ bandera› to insult;
‹ honor› to offend against
ultraje sustantivo masculino
outrage, insult
ultrajar verbo transitivo to outrage
ultraje sustantivo masculino outrage, insult
' ultraje' also found in these entries:
English:
mistreatment
* * *ultraje nminsult* * *m fmloutrage; ( insulto) insult* * *ultraje nminsulto: outrage, insult
- 1
- 2
См. также в других словарях:
affront — ► NOUN ▪ an action or remark that causes offence. ► VERB ▪ offend the modesty or values of. ORIGIN from Old French afronter to slap in the face, insult … English terms dictionary
affront — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ personal VERB + AFFRONT ▪ regard sth as, see sth as, take sth as ▪ He took his son s desertion as a personal affront. PREPOSITION … Collocations dictionary
affront — noun an action or remark that causes outrage or offence. verb offend the modesty or values of. Origin ME: from OFr. afronter to slap in the face, insult , based on L. ad frontem to the face … English new terms dictionary
affront — /əˈfrʌnt / (say uh frunt) noun 1. a personally offensive act or word; an intentional slight; an open manifestation of disrespect; an insult to the face: his disrespectful remark was meant as a deliberate affront to the king; some passages in the… …
affront — I UK [əˈfrʌnt] / US noun [countable] Word forms affront : singular affront plural affronts something insulting that makes you shocked and angry II UK [əˈfrʌnt] / US verb [transitive] Word forms affront : present tense I/you/we/they affront… … English dictionary
affront — I. transitive verb Etymology: Middle English afronten, from Anglo French afrunter to defy, from Vulgar Latin *affrontare, from Latin ad + front , frons forehead Date: 14th century 1. a. to insult especially to the face by behavior or language b.… … New Collegiate Dictionary
affront — af|front1 [ ə frʌnt ] noun count something insulting that makes you shocked and angry: She took the comment as a personal affront. affront af|front 2 [ ə frʌnt ] verb transitive to insult someone or make them shocked and angry: Bert was deeply… … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
affront — 1. verb /əˈfɹʌnt/ a) To insult intentionally, especially openly. b) To meet defiantly; to confront. 2. noun /əˈfɹʌnt/ An open or intentional offense … Wiktionary
affront — 1 verb (transitive usually passive) to offend or insult someone, especially by not showing respect 2 noun (countable usually singular) a remark or action that offends or insults someone (+ to): an affront to his pride … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
affront — 1. noun an affront to public morality Syn: insult, offense, indignity, slight, snub, put down, provocation, injury; outrage, atrocity, scandal; informal slap in the face, kick in the teeth 2. verb she was affronted by his familiarity Syn … Thesaurus of popular words
affront — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) v. & n. insult, slight, snub. See disrespect. II (Roget s IV) n. Syn. insult, indignity, offense; see insult . v. Syn. offend, insult, slight, provoke; see insult , offend . See Synonym Study at offend … English dictionary for students