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1 bring shame on
beschamen -
2 bring shame on someone
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3 shame
n. schaamte; schande--------v. schamen; schaamte voelen; beschaamd maken; te schande makenshame1[ sjeem]I 〈telbaar zelfstandig naamwoord; alleen enkelvoud〉2 zonde♦voorbeelden:¶ what a shame! • het is een schande!; wat jammer!2 schande ⇒ smaad, vernedering♦voorbeelden:have no shame • geen schaamte kennendon't you feel shame at having told lies? • schaam je je niet dat je leugens verteld hebt?for shame • uit schaamtebe past shame • geen schaamte meer kennenbe dead/lost to shame • alle schaamte verloren hebbencry shame on someone • schande van iemand sprekento my shame • tot mijn (grote) schande〈 tegen spreker〉 shame! • schandalig!, hoe durft u!shame on you! • schaam je!, je moest je schamen!————————shame2〈 werkwoord〉1 beschamen ⇒ beschaamd doen staan/maken♦voorbeelden:she shamed him out of copying his homework • ze maakte hem zo beschaamd, dat hij het huiswerk niet meer durfde overschrijven
См. также в других словарях:
bring shame upon — index derogate, disgrace, dishonor (deprive of honor), humiliate, pillory Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
bring shame on — cause disgrace to , cause dishonor to … English contemporary dictionary
shame — [shām] n. [ME < OE scamu, akin to Ger scham] 1. a painful feeling of having lost the respect of others because of the improper behavior, incompetence, etc. of oneself or of someone that one is close to or associated with 2. a tendency to have… … English World dictionary
shame — I n. 1) to bring shame on, to, upon 2) to feel shame at (they felt shame at accepting bribes) 3) (colloq.) an awful, crying, dirty shame 4) a shame to + inf. (it s a shame to waste so much time = it s a shame wasting so much time) 5) a shame that … Combinatory dictionary
shame — Synonyms and related words: abasement, abash, abashment, abomination, apologies, atrocity, attrition, ayenbite of inwit, bad, besmirch, bitterness, blacken, bring down, bring into discredit, bring low, bring shame upon, bully, burning shame,… … Moby Thesaurus
shame — 01. It s really a [shame] that Ken and Barbie didn t get married; they seemed so well suited to one another. 02. The little boy felt really [ashamed] of himself when his mother caught him stealing change out of her purse. 03. Many people feel… … Grammatical examples in English
shame — 1 noun 1 (U) the uncomfortable feeling of being guilty and embarrassed that you have when you have done something wrong: a deep sense of shame | to your shame (=making you feel ashamed): She realized to her shame that she had forgotten Nina s… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
shame — [[t]ʃe͟ɪm[/t]] ♦♦♦ shames, shaming, shamed 1) N UNCOUNT Shame is an uncomfortable feeling that you get when you have done something wrong or embarrassing, or when someone close to you has. She felt a deep sense of shame... They feel shame and… … English dictionary
shame — n. & v. n. 1 a feeling of distress or humiliation caused by consciousness of the guilt or folly of oneself or an associate. 2 a capacity for experiencing this feeling, esp. as imposing a restraint on behaviour (has no sense of shame). 3 a state… … Useful english dictionary
shame — I. noun Etymology: Middle English, from Old English scamu; akin to Old High German scama shame Date: before 12th century 1. a. a painful emotion caused by consciousness of guilt, shortcoming, or impropriety b. the susceptibility to such emotion … New Collegiate Dictionary
bring disgrace on — dishonor, bring shame upon … English contemporary dictionary