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1 réputation
réputation [ʀepytasjɔ̃]feminine noun• avoir bonne/mauvaise réputation to have a good/bad reputation• se faire une réputation to make a reputation for o.s.• connaître qn/qch de réputation (seulement) to know sb/sth (only) by repute* * *ʀepytasjɔ̃1) ( honorabilité) reputation2) ( renom) reputationavoir bonne/mauvaise réputation — to have a good/bad reputation
sa réputation d'efficacité/de chanteur — his reputation for efficiency/as a singer
* * *ʀepytasjɔ̃ nfavoir la réputation d'être... — to have a reputation for being...
connaître qn/qch de réputation — to know sb/sth by repute
* * *réputation nf1 ( honorabilité) reputation; nuire à or ternir la réputation de qn to damage sb's reputation;2 ( renom) reputation; avoir bonne/mauvaise réputation to have a good/bad reputation; se faire une réputation to make a name for oneself; leur réputation n'est plus à faire their reputation is well-established; connaître qn/qch de réputation to know sb/sth by reputation; sa réputation d'efficacité/de chanteur his reputation for efficiency/as a singer; avoir la réputation d'être to have a reputation for being; œuvre de grande réputation highly regarded work.[repytasjɔ̃] nom fémininjouir d'une bonne réputation to have ou to enjoy a good reputationse faire une réputation to make a reputation ou name for oneselfun hôtel de bonne/mauvaise réputation a hotel of good/ill reputeelle a la réputation de noter sévèrement she has a reputation ou she's well-known for being a tough markermarque de réputation mondiale ou internationale world-famous brand, brand of international reputeconnaître quelqu'un de réputation to know somebody by repute ou reputationporter atteinte à la réputation de quelqu'un to damage ou to blacken somebody's good name -
2 skade sitt rykte
damage one's reputation -
3 perjuicio
m.harm, damage.causar perjuicios (a) to do harm o damage (to)ir en perjuicio de to be detrimental tola reforma educativa favorece a algunas asignaturas en perjuicio de otras the education reform favors some subjects at the expense of otherslo haré, sin perjuicio de que proteste I'll do it, but I retain the right to make a complaint about it* * *1 (material) damage; (económico) loss\causar perjuicio a alguien to damage somebody's interestscon perjuicio para resulting in damage toen perjuicio de adversely affecting, to the detriment of, againstsin perjuicio de without adversely affecting, without detriment to 2 DERECHO without prejudice to* * *noun m.harm, damage* * *SM damage, harmel escándalo ha reportado graves perjuicios al ministro — the scandal has done the minister serious damage o harm
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en perjuicio de algo — to the detriment of sth, at the expense of sthhan bajado los precios en perjuicio de la calidad — prices have fallen to the detriment o at the expense of quality
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redundar en perjuicio de algo — to be detrimental to sth, harm sth•
sin perjuicio de — (Jur) without prejudice todaño 1)sin perjuicio de que luego me pueda arrepentir — even though I might change my mind later, in spite of the fact that I might change my mind later
* * *a) ( daño) damageno sufrió ningún perjuicio — it did him no harm o damage
b)en perjuicio de — (frml)
redunda o va en perjuicio de todos — it works against o is detrimental to everyone
c)sin perjuicio: sin perjuicio para su salud without detriment to his health (frml); sin perjuicio de los derechos establecidos por la ley — without affecting your statutory rights
* * *= disservice, harmdoing.Ex. A sham catalog is a disservice to the user, and participating in the creation of a sham catalog is personally degrading to a professional.Ex. The act of ' harmdoing' is defined, & the impact of legal structures on the behavior of the harmdoer & victim is examined.----* caso por daños y perjuicios = damages case.* causar perjuicio = bring + harm.* compensación por daños y perjuicios = liquidated damages.* daños y perjuicios = consequential damage.* demandar por daños y perjuicios = sue for + damage.* en perjuicio de = to the detriment of, to + Posesivo + detriment.* indemnización por daños y perjuicios = compensatory damages.* reparar un perjuicio = make + amends (for/to).* sin perjuicio de = notwithstanding.* sin perjuicios = open mind.* * *a) ( daño) damageno sufrió ningún perjuicio — it did him no harm o damage
b)en perjuicio de — (frml)
redunda o va en perjuicio de todos — it works against o is detrimental to everyone
c)sin perjuicio: sin perjuicio para su salud without detriment to his health (frml); sin perjuicio de los derechos establecidos por la ley — without affecting your statutory rights
* * *= disservice, harmdoing.Ex: A sham catalog is a disservice to the user, and participating in the creation of a sham catalog is personally degrading to a professional.
Ex: The act of ' harmdoing' is defined, & the impact of legal structures on the behavior of the harmdoer & victim is examined.* caso por daños y perjuicios = damages case.* causar perjuicio = bring + harm.* compensación por daños y perjuicios = liquidated damages.* daños y perjuicios = consequential damage.* demandar por daños y perjuicios = sue for + damage.* en perjuicio de = to the detriment of, to + Posesivo + detriment.* indemnización por daños y perjuicios = compensatory damages.* reparar un perjuicio = make + amends (for/to).* sin perjuicio de = notwithstanding.* sin perjuicios = open mind.* * *1 (daño) damagecausó grave perjuicio a su reputación it caused serious damage to his reputationesto le reportará a la empresa un gran perjuicio económico this will prove very damaging for the company financially, this will prove highly detrimental to the company financially ( frml)no sufrió ningún perjuicio it did him no harm o damage2en perjuicio de ( frml): la ley electoral redunda en perjuicio de los partidos minoritarios the electoral law works against o works to the detriment of o is detrimental to minority partieslo beneficia a él pero va en perjuicio de todos los demás it works to his advantage but to everyone else's disadvantage, it benefits him but it is detrimental to everyone else ( frml)3sin perjuicio: sin perjuicio para su salud without detriment to his health ( frml)sin perjuicio de los derechos establecidos por la ley without affecting your statutory rightses preciso tomar una decisión ahora, sin perjuicio de que más tarde cambiemos de opinión we need to make a decision now, but this doesn't mean we can't change our minds later o it is essential we make a decision now, but this does not preclude a change of plan at a later date* * *
perjuicio sustantivo masculino ( daño) damage;◊ no sufrió ningún perjuicio it did him no harm o damage;
le causó un gran perjuicio it was very damaging to him;
redunda o va en perjuicio de todos it works against o (frml) is detrimental to everyone;
sin perjuicio para su salud without detriment to his health (frml);
sin perjuicio de que cambiemos de opinión even though we may change our minds later
perjuicio sustantivo masculino harm, damage: tendrá que pagar daños y perjuicios, he'll have to pay damages
' perjuicio' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
crasa
- craso
- daño
- mal
- remediar
- reparación
- revertir
- sangrar
- sufrir
- reparar
English:
damage
- detriment
- disservice
- harm
- prejudice
* * *perjuicio nmharm, damage;causar perjuicios (a) to do harm o damage (to);ir en perjuicio de to be detrimental to;la reforma educativa favorece a algunas asignaturas en perjuicio de otras the education reform favours some subjects at the expense of others;una indemnización por daños y perjuicios compensation for damages;sin perjuicio: lo haré, sin perjuicio de que proteste I'll do it, but I retain the right to make a complaint about it;urge la reforma de la ley, sin perjuicio de la revisión de otras leyes the law must be reformed as a matter of urgency, however this should not mean that the review of other laws is neglected* * *m harm, damage;sin perjuicio de without affecting* * *perjuicio nm1) : harm, damage2)en perjuicio de : to the detriment of -
4 desacreditar
v.to discredit.Ella desacredita a Ricardo She discredits Richard.Ella desacreditó a su amiga She discredited=debunked her friend.El político desacreditó al oponente The politician discredited his opponent* * *1 to discredit, bring discredit on, bring into discredit* * *verb* * *1.VT [+ político, gobierno] to discredit2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < persona> to discredit; <buen nombre/institución> to discredit, bring... into disreputeb) < teoría> to discredit2.desacreditarse v pron (refl) to discredit oneself, damage one's reputation* * *= discredit, denigrate, debunk, bring + Nombre + into disrepute, disgrace, taint.Ex. Such circulation may contribute little to the creation of whole personalities but it may do much to discredit the circulators.Ex. This is not to denigrate such writing, much of which is extremely valuable.Ex. Process reengineering is in the debunking phase of its life cycle - an evolutionary pattern in which management ideas and techniques are first presented as panaceas for business success and subsequently debunked as worthless.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. 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.----* desacreditarse = come into + disrepute, fall into + disrepute.* desacreditar un mito = debunk + a myth.* estar desacreditado = hold in + disrepute.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) < persona> to discredit; <buen nombre/institución> to discredit, bring... into disreputeb) < teoría> to discredit2.desacreditarse v pron (refl) to discredit oneself, damage one's reputation* * *= discredit, denigrate, debunk, bring + Nombre + into disrepute, disgrace, taint.Ex: Such circulation may contribute little to the creation of whole personalities but it may do much to discredit the circulators.
Ex: This is not to denigrate such writing, much of which is extremely valuable.Ex: Process reengineering is in the debunking phase of its life cycle - an evolutionary pattern in which management ideas and techniques are first presented as panaceas for business success and subsequently debunked as worthless.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: 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.* desacreditarse = come into + disrepute, fall into + disrepute.* desacreditar un mito = debunk + a myth.* estar desacreditado = hold in + disrepute.* * *desacreditar [A1 ]vtesos rumores lo han desacreditado mucho those rumors have done his reputation a great deal of harm o have seriously damaged his reputationla oposición intentó desacreditarlo the opposition tried to discredit him( refl) to discredit oneself, damage one's reputation* * *
desacreditar ( conjugate desacreditar) verbo transitivo
to discredit
desacreditarse verbo pronominal ( refl) to discredit oneself, damage one's reputation
desacreditar verbo transitivo (desprestigiar) to discredit, bring into discredit
' desacreditar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
descalificar
English:
discredit
- disgrace
- disparage
- debunk
- disrepute
* * *♦ vtto discredit;hubo una campaña para desacreditarla there was a campaign to discredit her;este nuevo fracaso lo desacredita como político this latest failure has destroyed his credibility as a politician;su actuación ha desacreditado al partido his behaviour has brought the party into disrepute* * *v/t discredit* * *desacreditar vtdesprestigiar: to discredit, to disgrace -
5 schädigen
v/t damage, (Ruf, Ansehen, Funktion) auch impair; (jemanden) harm; um Millionen geschädigt werden suffer millions of euros etc. of damage; die Erbanlagen schädigen harm the genes, do genetic damage; siehe auch schaden* * *to mar* * *schä|di|gen ['ʃɛːdign]vtto damage; Gesundheit, Umwelt auch to harm; jdn to hurt, to harm; Firma, Ansehen to damage, to hurtman muss die Firma schä́digen, wo man nur kann (iro) — you've got to get what you can out of the firm
* * *schä·di·gen[ˈʃɛ:dɪgn̩]vt▪ jdn/etw [durch etw akk] \schädigen/sehr \schädigen to harm sb/sth/to do sb/sth great harm [with sth]* * *transitives Verb damage <health, reputation, interests>; harm, hurt < person>; cause losses to <firm, industry, etc.>* * *um Millionen geschädigt werden suffer millions of euros etc of damage;* * *transitives Verb damage <health, reputation, interests>; harm, hurt < person>; cause losses to <firm, industry, etc.>* * *(Ruf) v.to impair v. (gesundheitlich) v.to harm v.to injure v. v.to damage v. -
6 lädieren
v/t (beschädigen) damage; (verletzen) injure* * *lä|die|ren [lɛ'diːrən] ptp lädiertvtKunstwerk, Briefmarke to damage; Körperteil to injurelädiert sein/aussehen (hum) — to be/look the worse for wear
sein lädiertes Image — his tarnished image
* * *lä·die·ren *[lɛˈdi:rən]vt▪ [jdm] etw \lädieren to damage [sb's] sth* * *transitives Verb damage; (fig.) damage, harm < reputation etc.>; undermine < confidence>* * ** * *lädiert aussehen — (ugs., scherzh.) look battered
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7 reputacja
-i; fpsuć (popsuć perf) komuś reputację — to damage sb's reputation
psuć (popsuć perf) sobie reputację — to blot one's copybook
* * *f.reputation; dbać o swoją/czyjąś reputację guard one's/sb's reputation; mieć złą/dobrą reputację have a bad/good reputation; psuć komuś reputację damage sb's reputation.The New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > reputacja
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8 Nachrede
f: üble Nachrede malicious gossip; JUR. defamation (of character); mündlich: auch slander; jemanden in üble Nachrede bringen damage s.o.’s reputation* * *Nach|re|def1)jdn in üble Náchrede bringen — to damage sb's reputation, to bring sb into ill repute
üble Náchrede über jdn verbreiten or führen — to cast aspersions on sb's character
in üble Náchrede geraten or kommen — to get a bad reputation
* * *Nach·re·def JURüble \Nachrede defamation [of character] form, slanderüble \Nachrede [über jdn] verbreiten to spread slander [about sb]* * *üble Nachrede — malicious gossip; (Rechtsw.) defamation [of character]
* * *Nachrede f:jemanden in üble Nachrede bringen damage sb’s reputation* * *üble Nachrede — malicious gossip; (Rechtsw.) defamation [of character]
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9 vulnerar
v.1 to harm, to damage.Ricardo vulneró a su hermano Richard damaged his brother.2 to violate, to break (ley, pacto).El policía vulneró la ley The policeman violated the law.* * *1 (ley etc) to violate2 figurado (honor etc) to damage, harm* * *VT1) (=perjudicar) [+ fama] to damage, harm; [+ costumbre, derechos] to interfere with, affect seriously2) (Jur, Com) to violate, break* * *verbo transitivo (frml)a) <derecho/ley> to violate* * *= breach.Ex. He defends the right to breach voluntary codes of practice so long as they are within the laws passed by country, state and city.----* vulnerar la seguridad = breach + security.* * *verbo transitivo (frml)a) <derecho/ley> to violate* * *= breach.Ex: He defends the right to breach voluntary codes of practice so long as they are within the laws passed by country, state and city.
* vulnerar la seguridad = breach + security.* * *vulnerar [A1 ]vt( frml)1 ‹persona› to wound, hurtcircunstancias que pueden vulnerar su posición circumstances which could damage his position2 ‹dignidad› to violate, offend3 ‹derecho› to violate; ‹ley› to breakvulnerar el derecho a la intimidad/privacidad de algn to violate sb's right to privacy* * *
vulnerar verbo transitivo
1 (incumplir una ley, acuerdo) to infringe, violate
2 (la intimidad, el respeto, etc) to hurt, damage
' vulnerar' also found in these entries:
English:
impinge
* * *vulnerar vt1. [prestigio, reputación] to harm, to damage;[intimidad] to invade2. [ley, pacto] to violate, to break* * *damage, harm* * *vulnerar vt1) : to injure, to damage (one's reputation or honor)2) : to violate, to break (a law or contract) -
10 atteint
atteint, e [atɛ̃, ɛ̃t]1. adjectivea. ( = malade) ill2. feminine noun• hors d'atteinte de [+ projectile] out of range of* * *atteinte atɛ̃, ɛ̃t adjectif1) ( affecté) affected (de, par by)être atteint de — ( de façon durable) to be suffering from [maladie]
2) ( frappé) hit (de, par by)3) (colloq) ( timbré)être atteint — to be touched (colloq)
* * *atɛ̃, ɛ̃t atteint, -e1. ppSee:2. adj3. nf1)atteinte à [liberté, intimité, dignité, intérêts, principes, valeurs] — an attack on, a blow to
porter atteinte à — to strike a blow at, to undermine
2) (= portée)* * *A pp ⇒ atteindre.B pp adj1 ( affecté) affected (de, par by); les personnes légèrement/gravement atteintes the people slightly/seriously affected; une région très atteinte par la pollution a region badly affected by pollution; être atteint de ( de façon durable) to be suffering from [maladie]; les plus atteints the worst affected;2 ( frappé) hit (de/par by); un passant atteint d'une balle/par un éclat d'obus a passer-by hit by a bullet/by shrapnel;3 ○( timbré) être atteint to be touched○; un peu atteint a bit touched ( jamais épith); complètement atteint off one's rocker○ ( jamais épith).C atteinte nf1 ( attaque) atteinte à attack on; il considérait cela comme une atteinte à sa virilité he considered it an attack on his virility; hors d'atteinte [personne, paix, poste] beyond reach; [cible] out of range; [rester, sembler] out of reach; porter atteinte à to undermine [crédit, prestige, dignité]; to damage [réputation, honneur]; to endanger [sécurité, sûreté]; to infringe [droit]; to threaten [région, environnement]; atteinte aux droits de l'Homme infringement of human rights; atteinte à la liberté/aux droits (de l'individu) Jur infringement of civil liberties/of personal rights; atteinte à l'ordre public Jur public order offenceGB; atteinte à la sécurité or sûreté de l'État Jur breach of national security; atteinte à la vie privée Jur breach of the right to privacy;2 ( affection) problem; atteinte pulmonaire lung problem; atteinte de attack of; les atteintes du froid the effects of cold; les premières atteintes de la maladie the onset ou first effects of the disease.( féminin atteinte) [atɛ̃, ɛ̃t] adjectif1. [d'une maladie, d'un fléau] affected2. (familier) [fou]atteinte nom féminin[attaque] attackporter atteinte à l'ordre public to commit a breach of ou to disturb the peace————————atteintes nom féminin pluriel[effets nocifs] effectsa. [épilepsie, diabète] he first displayed the symptoms of the disease at the age of 20b. [alcoolisme, dépression] the first signs of the problem came to light when he was 20 -
11 reputatie
♦voorbeelden:een goede/slechte reputatie hebben • have a good/bad reputationvan (een) twijfelachtige reputatie • of doubtful reputation, standingde reputatie hebben (van) een genie te zijn • be reputed to be a genius2 zijn reputatie ophouden/op het spel zetten • keep up/risk one's reputationiemands reputatie schaden, slecht zijn voor iemands reputatie • damage someone's reputationeen firma met een reputatie • a reputable firm -
12 durante la mayor parte de
Ex. The cause of the damage to his reputation was the fact that most of his important early works were out of the public eye for much of the 20th c.* * *Ex: The cause of the damage to his reputation was the fact that most of his important early works were out of the public eye for much of the 20th c.
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13 mantener en privado
(v.) = be out of the public eyeEx. The cause of the damage to his reputation was the fact that most of his important early works were out of the public eye for much of the 20th c.* * *(v.) = be out of the public eyeEx: The cause of the damage to his reputation was the fact that most of his important early works were out of the public eye for much of the 20th c.
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14 no estar expuesto al público
(v.) = be out of the public eyeEx. The cause of the damage to his reputation was the fact that most of his important early works were out of the public eye for much of the 20th c.* * *(v.) = be out of the public eyeEx: The cause of the damage to his reputation was the fact that most of his important early works were out of the public eye for much of the 20th c.
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15 no ser divulgado
(v.) = be out of the public eyeEx. The cause of the damage to his reputation was the fact that most of his important early works were out of the public eye for much of the 20th c.* * *(v.) = be out of the public eyeEx: The cause of the damage to his reputation was the fact that most of his important early works were out of the public eye for much of the 20th c.
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16 Kreditschädigung
Kreditschädigung
damage to credit (reputation), injurious falsehood (Br.), discredit;
• Kreditschädigung nachweisen to prove the damage to one’s credit;
• am Kreditschalter Schlange stehen to be waiting at the loan window;
• Kreditscheck outclearing cheque;
• Kreditschöpfung creation of bank credit;
• Kreditschöpfungsmultiplikator money supply expansion multiplier;
• Kreditschraube credit squeeze;
• Kreditschraube anziehen to tighten credits;
• Kreditschrumpfung contraction of credit;
• Kreditschutzverein trade protection society (Br.);
• Kreditschwindel obtaining money by false pretences;
• auf der Kreditseite to the good;
• Kreditsektor credit field. -
17 szko|dzić
impf vi to harm (komuś sb)- szkodzić ludzkiemu zdrowiu to be harmful to humans- nie chcieć nikomu szkodzić to mean no harm to anybody- szkodzić komuś w karierze to be harmful for sb’s career- szkodzić czyjejś reputacji to damage sb’s reputation- szkodzić na wątrobę/nerki to be bad for your liver/kidneys- cebula mu szkodzi onion disagrees with him- zbyt dużo słońca może szkodzić zdrowiu too much sun can do harm- spaliny szkodzą zdrowiu exhaust fumes are harmful a. noxious- ta szczepionka szkodzi zdrowiu dzieci this vaccine does harm to children- „palenie szkodzi zdrowiu” ‘smoking can seriously damage your health’ ⇒ zaszkodzić■ (nic) nie szkodzi! never mind!, not at all!- co to szkodzi? what’s the harm in it?- co to szkodzi, że… what harm is there in…- kto późno przychodzi, sam sobie szkodzi przysł. first come, first served- złość piękności szkodzi ≈ bad temper spoils the complexionThe New English-Polish, Polish-English Kościuszko foundation dictionary > szko|dzić
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18 это серьёзно подорвало его репутацию
Универсальный русско-английский словарь > это серьёзно подорвало его репутацию
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19 подрывать репутацию
to damage smb’s reputation -
20 подрывать репутацию
См. также в других словарях:
damage one's reputation — index defame Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
reputation — rep‧u‧ta‧tion [ˌrepjˈteɪʆn] noun [countable] the opinion people have of something or someone, based on what has happened in the past: • The firm has a very good reputation. • A lengthy legal battle would damage the reputation of both sides.… … Financial and business terms
damage — ▪ I. damage dam‧age 1 [ˈdæmɪdʒ] noun 1. [uncountable] a bad effect on something that makes it weaker or less successful: damage to • The result of this policy will be severe damage to the British economy. 2. [uncountable] physical harm caused to… … Financial and business terms
damage */*/*/ — I UK [ˈdæmɪdʒ] / US noun Get it right: damage: When damage means harm or injury it is an uncountable noun, and so: ▪ it is never used in the plural ▪ it never comes after a or a number Wrong: These toxins can cause damages to the lungs and… … English dictionary
damage — dam|age1 [ dæmıdʒ ] noun *** 1. ) uncount physical harm caused to something so that it is broken, spoiled, or injured: Mr. Charlton surveyed the damage caused by the bulldozer. damage to: Damage to the building could take six months to repair. do … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
damage — 1 noun (U) 1 PHYSICAL HARM physical harm caused to something or someone (+ to): damage to property | serious/severe/extensive damage (=very bad damage): The earthquake caused extensive structural damage. | minor/superficial damage (=damage that… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
damage — dam|age1 W2S2 [ˈdæmıdʒ] n ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(physical harm)¦ 2¦(emotional harm)¦ 3¦(bad effect)¦ 4 damages 5 the damage is done 6 what s the damage? ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ [Date: 1200 1300; : Old French; Origin: dam damage , from Latin damnum; … Dictionary of contemporary English
Reputation management — is the process of tracking an entity s actions and other entities opinions about those actions; reporting on those actions and opinions; and reacting to that report creating a feedback loop. All entities involved are generally people, but that… … Wikipedia
damage — dam·age 1 n [Old French, from dam injury, harm, from Latin damnum financial loss, fine] 1: loss or harm resulting from injury to person, property, or reputation 2 pl: the money awarded to a party in a civil suit as reparation for the loss or… … Law dictionary
reputation — rep·u·ta·tion n: overall quality or character as seen or judged by people in general within a community see also character evidence at evidence; reputation testimony at testimony Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law … Law dictionary
Reputation (as Property) — • The outcome of a person s meritorious activity Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Reputation (As Property) Reputation (as Property) … Catholic encyclopedia