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1 mortificare
mortify* * *mortificare v.tr.1 (umiliare) to mortify, to humiliate: la sua risposta mi mortificò, his reply humiliated me (o I was mortified by his reply); mortificare i sentimenti di qlcu., to wound (o to mortify) s.o.'s feelings; mortificare qlcu. con un'osservazione, to humiliate (o to mortify) s.o. with a scathing remark2 (reprimere) to mortify: mortificare la carne, to mortify the flesh; mortificare le proprie passioni, to mortify one's passions3 (svilire) to demolish, to destroy: mortificare una poesia con una brutta interpretazione, to demolish a poem with a bad interpretation4 (med.) to mortify.◘ mortificarsi v.rifl. to mortify oneself: il sacerdote ci esortò a mortificarci durante la quaresima, the priest exhorted us to mortify ourselves during Lent◆ v.intr.pron. (sentirsi umiliato) to feel* mortified, to feel* humiliated: al minimo rimprovero si mortifica, at the slightest reproof she feels mortified.* * *[mortifi'kare]1. vt2. vr (mortificarsi)Rel to mortify o.s.3. vip (mortificarsi)(vergognarsi, spiacersi) to feel mortified* * *[mortifi'kare] 1.verbo transitivo1) (umiliare) to mortify, to humiliate2) relig. to mortify [carne, corpo]2.verbo pronominale mortificarsi relig. to mortify oneself* * *mortificare/mortifi'kare/ [1]1 (umiliare) to mortify, to humiliate2 relig. to mortify [carne, corpo]II mortificarsi verbo pronominalerelig. to mortify oneself. -
2 плоть
Авраам, праотец наш по плоти библ. — Abraham, our forefather according to the flesh
дух бодр, плоть же немощна библ. — the spirit is willing but the flesh is week
плоть и кровь библ. (человек) — flesh and blood
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3 tahan hawa nafsu
mortify the flesh, mortified the flesh, mortified the flesh, mortifying the flesh -
4 testét sanyargatja
to mortify the flesh -
5 mortificar
v.to mortify.Su actitud aspaba a María His attitude mortified Mary.* * *1 to mortify* * *1. VT1) (=atormentar) to torment, plague2) (=humillar) to humiliate3) (Rel)4) (Med) to damage seriously2.See:* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( atormentar) to tormentlos celos lo mortifican — he's tortured o tormented by jealousy
b) (Relig) to mortify2.mortificarse v pron (refl) ( atormentarse) to fret, distress oneself; (Relig) to mortify the flesh* * *= chagrin, spite, torture, eat away at, mortify.Ex. In the course of my explanation I became not only chagrined, but ashamed for our profession and for how, in this particular case, rules had made finding the material that this person wanted so difficult.Ex. Men's abuse of children is in many instances instrumental in order to coerce or retaliate against women, echoing the Greek myth of Medea who killed her own children to spite her father.Ex. They tortured her into revealing her Pin number and safe code before cutting her up and disposing of her in bin liners.Ex. Rather than catalog departments going out of business, they could turn their attention once again to cataloging special local materials, eating away at store-rooms of uncataloged materials, and making their collections as a whole more responsive to their local constituency.Ex. We're assailed by doubts, mortified by our own shortcomings, surrounded by freaks, testy over silly details.----* conciencia + mortificar = conscience + smite, conscience + trouble.* * *1.verbo transitivoa) ( atormentar) to tormentlos celos lo mortifican — he's tortured o tormented by jealousy
b) (Relig) to mortify2.mortificarse v pron (refl) ( atormentarse) to fret, distress oneself; (Relig) to mortify the flesh* * *= chagrin, spite, torture, eat away at, mortify.Ex: In the course of my explanation I became not only chagrined, but ashamed for our profession and for how, in this particular case, rules had made finding the material that this person wanted so difficult.
Ex: Men's abuse of children is in many instances instrumental in order to coerce or retaliate against women, echoing the Greek myth of Medea who killed her own children to spite her father.Ex: They tortured her into revealing her Pin number and safe code before cutting her up and disposing of her in bin liners.Ex: Rather than catalog departments going out of business, they could turn their attention once again to cataloging special local materials, eating away at store-rooms of uncataloged materials, and making their collections as a whole more responsive to their local constituency.Ex: We're assailed by doubts, mortified by our own shortcomings, surrounded by freaks, testy over silly details.* conciencia + mortificar = conscience + smite, conscience + trouble.* * *mortificar [A2 ]vt1(atormentar): los celos lo mortifican he's tortured o tormented by jealousyme mortifica tener que recordarle el dinero que me debe I feel awful about having to remind him about the money he owes melos mosquitos la mortificaron toda la noche she was tormented by mosquitos all nightdeja de mortificar al gato stop torturing o tormenting the cat2 ( Relig) to mortify( refl)1 (atormentarse) to fret, distress oneselfno te mortifiques por esa tontería don't distress yourself o fret over such a stupid little thing2 ( Relig) to mortify the flesh* * *
mortificar ( conjugate mortificar) verbo transitivo
◊ los celos lo mortifican he's tortured o tormented by jealousyb) (Relig) to mortify
mortificarse verbo pronominal ( refl) ( atormentarse) to fret, distress oneself;
(Relig) to mortify the flesh
mortificar vtr, mortificarse verbo reflexivo to mortify, fret: no merece la pena mortificarse por algo que no se puede evitar, it's not worth fretting over something you couldn't prevent from happening
' mortificar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
mortificarse
* * *♦ vt1. [el cuerpo] to mortify2. [angustiar, molestar] to torment;el recuerdo del accidente lo mortifica he is tormented by the memory of the accident* * *v/t torment* * *mortificar {72} vt1) : to mortify2) torturar: to trouble, to torment -
6 умерщвлять плоть
1) General subject: mortify the flesh, subdue one's flesh2) Religion: crucify, discipline, mortify the sins -
7 umiliare
humiliate* * *umiliare v.tr. to humiliate, to humble: non devi umiliarlo così, you must not humiliate him like that; umiliare i propri avversari, to humble one's opponents; umiliare qlcu. di fronte a tutti, to humiliate s.o. in front of everybody // umiliare la carne, to mortify the flesh.◘ umiliarsi v.rifl. to humble oneself, to humiliate oneself, to lower oneself: non devi umiliarti, you must not humble yourself; umiliare di fronte a qlcu., to humble oneself before s.o. (o to cringe to s.o.).* * *[umi'ljare]1. vt(gen) to humiliate2. vr (umiliarsi)umiliarsi (davanti a) — to humiliate o humble o.s. (before)
* * *[umi'ljare] 1.verbo transitivo to humble, to humiliate, to degrade [ persona]; to humble, to score off [ avversario]2.* * *umiliare/umi'ljare/ [1]to humble, to humiliate, to degrade [ persona]; to humble, to score off [ avversario]II umiliarsi verbo pronominaleto humble oneself. -
8 corpo
"body;Schaft;Körper;corpo"* * *m bodymilitary corpscorpo celeste heavenly bodycorpo diplomatico diplomatic corpscorpo di ballo dancers pl(a) corpo a corpo hand-to-hand* * *corpo s.m.1 body; ( corporatura) physique, build: il corpo umano, the human body; ha un corpo molto slanciato, his body (o physique) is very slim; un corpo atletico, an athletic body (o build); ( ginnastica) esercizi a corpo libero, freestyle gymnastics; mente sana in corpo sano, (prov.) a sound mind in a sound body // corpo di Bacco!, by Jove! // lotta corpo a corpo, hand-to-hand struggle, ( boxe) infighting; lottare corpo a corpo, to struggle hand-to-hand; ( boxe) bloccare in un corpo a corpo, to clinch // darsi a qlco. anima e corpo, to throw oneself body and soul into sthg. // a corpo morto, head-long; furiously: si è buttato a corpo morto in quel lavoro, he threw himself headlong into the job // i piaceri del corpo, the pleasures of the flesh; mortificare il corpo, to mortify the flesh // passare sul corpo di qlcu., to pass over s.o. // avere il diavolo in corpo, to be possessed; l'avrebbe strozzato con la rabbia che aveva in corpo, she was so angry she could have strangled him // senza corpo, bodiless (o incorporeal) // dar corpo a qlco., to make sthg. come true; è riuscito a dar corpo ai suoi sogni, he managed to make his dreams come true; dar corpo alle ombre, to imagine things; a mio avviso stai solo dando corpo alle ombre, I think you're just imagining things (o you're letting your imagination run away with you)2 ( cadavere) body, corpse; (non com.) corpus: seppellire un corpo, to bury a body; il corpo si trovava sul pavimento in biblioteca, the body was lying on the floor in the library3 ( parte principale) body, main part, core: il corpo di un edificio, the body (o main part) of a building; il corpo di un discorso, the core of a speech // far corpo con qlco., to be an integral part of sthg. // corpo di una nave, hull // corpo di una caldaia, boiler shell4 ( oggetto) body; corpo semplice, simple body; corpo composto, compound body; i corpi celesti, heavenly (o celestial) bodies; (med.) corpo estraneo, foreign body (o foreign matter); (mar.) corpo morto, anchor log // (fis.) corpo nero, blackbody // (dir.): corpo del reato, material evidence; corpo contundente, blunt instrument5 ( organismo) corps: corpo diplomatico, diplomatic corps; corpo d'armata, army corps; il corpo degli Alpini, the Alpine corps // corpo insegnante, teaching staff // corpo di ballo, (corps de) ballet // corpo di guardia, guards // corpo di spedizione, task force // spirito di corpo, team spirit6 ( raccolta, insieme) body: corpo di case, body of houses; corpo di leggi, body of laws // (econ.) vendita a corpo, bulk sale // (miner.) corpo minerario, orebody // (mat.) corpo non commutativo, corpo sghembo, skew field7 (fam.) ( ventre) stomach; belly: avere dolori di corpo, to have a stomachache; mettersi in corpo, to eat; andare di corpo, to evacuate one's bowels (o to have a bowel movement)* * *['kɔrpo]1. smcorpo liquido/gassoso — liquid/gaseous substance
darsi anima e corpo a — to give o.s. heart and soul to
prendere corpo — (idea, progetto) to take shape
a corpo morto fig — like a dead weight, heavily
2.* * *['kɔrpo]sostantivo maschile1) body2) (cadavere) (dead) body, corpsepassare sul corpo di qcn. — fig. to do sth. over sb.'s dead body
3) (gruppo)spirito di corpo — team spirit, esprit de corps
4) mil. corps*corpo dei pompieri — fire service o brigade
5) (di dottrina, testo)6) tecn. (parte principale) body8) (oggetto) object9) fis. body10) tip. (di carattere) type size, point size•corpo di ballo — ballet company, corps de ballet
corpo celeste — celestial o heavenly body
corpo di guardia — (guardie) guards pl.; (luogo) guardhouse
corpo del reato — dir. corpus delicti
••andare di corpo — to have a bowel movement o a motion
buttarsi a corpo morto in qcs. — to fling oneself into sth.
* * *corpo/'kɔrpo/sostantivo m.1 body; corpo umano human body; linguaggio del corpo body language; lotta corpo a corpo hand-to-hand fight; lottare corpo a corpo to fight hand to hand3 (gruppo) corpo medico medical profession; corpo insegnante teaching staff; il corpo elettorale the electorate; spirito di corpo team spirit, esprit de corps4 mil. corps*; corpo d'armata army corps; corpo di polizia police force; corpo dei pompieri fire service o brigade5 (di dottrina, testo) un corpo di leggi a body of laws6 tecn. (parte principale) body8 (oggetto) object; corpo contundente blunt instrument9 fis. body10 tip. (di carattere) type size, point sizeandare di corpo to have a bowel movement o a motion; avere il diavolo in corpo to be like someone possessed; buttarsi a corpo morto in qcs. to fling oneself into sth.; cadere a corpo morto to fall heavily\corpo di ballo ballet company, corps de ballet; corpo celeste celestial o heavenly body; corpo di Cristo body of Christ; corpo diplomatico diplomatic corps; corpo estraneo foreign body; corpo di guardia (guardie) guards pl.; (luogo) guardhouse; corpo del reato dir. corpus delicti. -
9 أمات الشهوات إلخ
أمَاتَ الشّهَوَات إلخto mortify the flesh, crucify the flesh, deaden the body, subdue the bodily appetites -
10 mortificarse
VPR1) (=atormentarse) to torment o.s., distress o.s.2) (Rel) to mortify the flesh* * *
mortificar vtr, mortificarse verbo reflexivo to mortify, fret: no merece la pena mortificarse por algo que no se puede evitar, it's not worth fretting over something you couldn't prevent from happening
' mortificarse' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
mortificar
* * *vpr[torturarse] to torment oneself;no te mortifiques, no fue culpa tuya don't torment yourself, it wasn't your fault* * *v/r fig1 ( angustiarse) distress o.s.ashamed* * *vr: to be mortified, to feel embarrassed -
11 castigar
v.1 to punish (imponer castigo a).castigaron a los niños sin cena they punished the children by sending them to bed without dinnerlo castigaron con la pena capital he was given the death penaltyElsa castiga a los chicos Elsa punishes the kids.Dios castiga la maldad God punishes evil.2 to penalize (sport).3 to damage.una zona castigada por las inundaciones a region severely hit by the floods4 to seduce.5 to ravage.6 to recur to punishment.* * *1 (aplicar una pena) to punish2 (dañar) to damage, ruin3 (una cabalgadura) to ride hard* * *verb* * *VT1) [por delito, falta]a) [+ delincuente, pecador, culpable] to punish ( por for)[+ niño] [gen] to punish; [sin salir] to ground, keep ines un delito que puede ser castigado con 15 años de prisión — it is a crime punishable by 15 years' imprisonment
la profesora me dejó castigado al terminar las clases — the teacher kept me in o made me stay behind after school
castigar la carne — (Rel) to mortify the flesh
b) (Dep) to penalize ( por for)c) (Com, Pol) to punish2) (=perjudicar) [guerra, crisis] to afflict, affect; [calor] to beat down on; [frío] to bite into3) [físicamente] (=maltratar) to damage, harmcastigamos a nuestro cuerpo con los excesos en la bebida — we harm our bodies with excessive drinking
castigar el hígado — iró to damage one's liver
4) [+ caballo] to ride hard5) (=corregir) [+ estilo] to refine; [+ texto] to correct, revise6) (=enamorar) to seduce7) (Com) [+ gastos] to reduce* * *verbo transitivo1)a) < criminal> to punishb) < niño> ( a quedarse en el colegio) to keep... in detention; ( a quedarse en casa) to keep... in as a punishment, to ground (esp AmE colloq)se quedó castigado por contestarle al profesor — he was kept in detention for answering the teacher back
mi padre me ha castigado — my father's keeping me in, my father's grounded me
2) crisis/enfermedad to affect* * *= punish, slap, victimise [victimize, -USA], put + Nombre + on the rack, discipline, chastise, smite.Nota: Verbo irregular: pasado smote, participio smitten. Usado comúnmente con un sentido religioso o bíblico.Ex. They admitted that they did not evaluate their technicians and aides, and confirmed that increases were automatic and the same 'across-the-board'; superior performance was not rewarded, nor inferior performance punished.Ex. I wonder if she did quit if she could slap us with a lawsuit.Ex. In the name of collegiality, students are victimized, considerable intellectual resources are being squandered, and the general public is deliberately misled.Ex. The article ' Putting publishers on the rack' discusses the implications for publishers of supermarkets' greater interest in books.Ex. It draws from the cases some practical pointers for librariansin hiring, firing, and disciplining employees = Deduce de los casos algunos consejos prácticos para los bibliotecarios de cómo contratar, despedir y sancionar a los empleados.Ex. The profession should cease practising the amateurism for which it chastises employers who have untrained persons trying to function as librarians.Ex. Instead, this may come off as a sort of mixed signal considering that God has chosen to smite California right after a proposition was passed banning same sex marriage.----* castigar con la prisión = punish with + prison.* castigar con todo el peso de la ley = punish + to the full extent of the law.* castigar duramente = smite.* castigar severamente = blast.* * *verbo transitivo1)a) < criminal> to punishb) < niño> ( a quedarse en el colegio) to keep... in detention; ( a quedarse en casa) to keep... in as a punishment, to ground (esp AmE colloq)se quedó castigado por contestarle al profesor — he was kept in detention for answering the teacher back
mi padre me ha castigado — my father's keeping me in, my father's grounded me
2) crisis/enfermedad to affect* * *= punish, slap, victimise [victimize, -USA], put + Nombre + on the rack, discipline, chastise, smite.Nota: Verbo irregular: pasado smote, participio smitten. Usado comúnmente con un sentido religioso o bíblico.Ex: They admitted that they did not evaluate their technicians and aides, and confirmed that increases were automatic and the same 'across-the-board'; superior performance was not rewarded, nor inferior performance punished.
Ex: I wonder if she did quit if she could slap us with a lawsuit.Ex: In the name of collegiality, students are victimized, considerable intellectual resources are being squandered, and the general public is deliberately misled.Ex: The article ' Putting publishers on the rack' discusses the implications for publishers of supermarkets' greater interest in books.Ex: It draws from the cases some practical pointers for librariansin hiring, firing, and disciplining employees = Deduce de los casos algunos consejos prácticos para los bibliotecarios de cómo contratar, despedir y sancionar a los empleados.Ex: The profession should cease practising the amateurism for which it chastises employers who have untrained persons trying to function as librarians.Ex: Instead, this may come off as a sort of mixed signal considering that God has chosen to smite California right after a proposition was passed banning same sex marriage.* castigar con la prisión = punish with + prison.* castigar con todo el peso de la ley = punish + to the full extent of the law.* castigar duramente = smite.* castigar severamente = blast.* * *castigar [A3 ]vtA1 ‹criminal› to punishserán castigados de acuerdo a la ley they will be punished according to the lawfueron castigados con la pena máxima they received the maximum sentencecrímenes que son castigados con la pena de muerte crimes punishable by death2 ‹niño›lo castigaron sin postre as a punishment he was made to go without dessert o they wouldn't let him have any dessertme castigaron a aprendérmelo de memoria as a punishment I was made to learn it off by heart o they made me learn it off by heartse quedó castigado por contestarle al profesor he was kept in detention for answering the teacher backmi padre me ha castigado por llegar tarde my father's keeping me in o my father's grounded me for being lateB1«crisis/enfermedad»: castigó duramente su ya débil organismo it severely affected her already weakened bodyla zona más castigada por la sequía the area hardest hit o worst affected by the drought2 ‹caballo› to ride … hard3 ‹toro› to inflict a great deal of punishment on4 ‹motor/frenos› to work … hard* * *
castigar ( conjugate castigar) verbo transitivo
( a quedarse en casa) to keep … in as a punishment, to ground (esp AmE colloq);
castigar verbo transitivo
1 to punish
2 (hacer sufrir, hacer padecer) to harm, ruin
3 Jur Dep to penalize
' castigar' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
enterarse
- sancionar
English:
book
- cane
- deal with
- penalize
- punish
- chastise
* * *♦ vt1. [imponer castigo a] to punish;castigaron a los niños sin cena they punished the children by sending them to bed without dinner;lo castigaron con la pena capital he was given the death penalty;los castigaron a copiar la lección diez veces they had to write out the lesson ten times as a punishment2. Dep to penalize;el árbitro castigó la acción con penalti the referee awarded a penalty for the foul3. [dañar] [piel, salud] to damage;[sujeto: sol, viento, epidemia] to devastate;una zona castigada por las inundaciones a region severely hit by the floods;las nuevas medidas castigan a los pequeños inversores the new measures are prejudicial to small investors4. [enamorar] to seduce5. [caballo] [con espuelas] to spur;[con látigo] to whip6. Taurom to wound♦ See also the pronominal verb castigarse* * *v/t punish* * *castigar {52} vt: to punish* * *castigar vb to punish -
12 Cilicium
(1) A Roman word for a coarse cloth made of goat's hair in Cilicia. It was much used m the Army and Navy for tents, sails or clothing. (2) During the time of mourning, or when suffering under any calamity, the Jews put on a kind of Cilicium made of coarse canvas. (3) A cloth mattress stuffed with cow-hair or seaweed, which was placed outside the walls of besieged cities, to deaden the blows of the battering ram. (4) A hair-shirt or sleeveless jacket made with a material of horse-hair and coarse hemp. Worn by religious men to mortify the flesh. -
13 kasteien
v/refl chastise o.s.; (sich enthalten) deny o.s.* * *kas|tei|en [kas'taiən] ptp kasteitvr(als Bußübung) to castigate or chastise oneself, to mortify the flesh (liter); (= sich Entbehrungen auferlegen) to deny oneself* * *kas·tei·en *[kasˈtaiən]vr (veraltend)2. (büßen) to castigate oneself* * *reflexives Verb chastise oneself; (fig.) deny oneself* * ** * *reflexives Verb chastise oneself; (fig.) deny oneself* * *v.to macerate v. -
14 spæge
vb:[ spæge sig, spæge sit kød] mortify the flesh. -
15 умерщвлять плоть
to mortify the flesh, to disciplineРусско-английский словарь религиозной лексики > умерщвлять плоть
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16 umiliare
[umi'ljare]1. vt(gen) to humiliate2. vr (umiliarsi)umiliarsi (davanti a) — to humiliate o humble o.s. (before)
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17 умерщвлять
vt; св - умертви́тьto kill, to put to death; притуплять to deadenумерщвля́ть плоть — to mortify the flesh
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18 плоть
жен.крайняя плоть — анат. foreskin, prepuce
••входить в кровь и плоть — to become second nature to smb., to become a part of smb.
облекать в плоть (и кровь) — to give form and substance to smth., to bring smth. to life
облекаться в плоть (и кровь) — to take a tangible form, to come into being
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19 macérer
macérer [maseʀe]➭ TABLE 6 transitive and intransitive verb* * *maseʀeverbe intransitif [plante, fruit] to soak; [viande] to marinate; ( dans du vinaigre) [cornichon] to picklefaire macérer — to steep, to soak
* * *maseʀe1. vi2. vtto macerate, (dans du vinaigre) to pickle* * *macérer verb table: céderB vi1 Culin, Pharm [plante, fruit, légume] to soak, to steep; [viande] to marinate; ( dans du vinaigre) [cornichon] to pickle; faire macérer to steep, to soak; laisser macérer les cornichons pendant deux mois leave gherkins to pickle for two months;2 fig macérer dans son ignorance to wallow in one's ignorance; macérer dans les remords to be racked by ou with remorse.[masere] verbe intransitiffaire macérer le poisson cru dans du jus de citron macerate ou steep the raw fish in lemon juice3. (figuré)————————[masere] verbe transitif -
20 DEYÐA
(-dda, -ddr), v.1) to kill, put to death;2) to make null and void (deyða dóm); deyða líkamliga löstu, girndir holdsins, deyða sik, to mortify the lusts of the flesh.* * *dd, [v. dauðr; Ulf. dauþjan; Germ. töden; Swed. döda]:—to kill, put to death, with acc., Ld. 54, Nj. 158, Fms. ii. 270: allit., deyða illum dauða, to put to an ill death, Clem. 57; dræpr ok deyðandi, a law term, Germ. vogelfrei, Gþl. 137; dræpr ok deyðr, N. G. L. i. 351: metaph. (theol.), Fms. ii. 238; d. sik, to mortify one’s lusts, Bs. i. 167.
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См. также в других словарях:
Mortify — Mor ti*fy, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Mortified}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Mortifying}.] [OE. mortifien, F. mortifier, fr. L. mortificare; L. mors, mortis, death + ficare (in comp.) to make. See {Mortal}, and { fy}.] 1. To destroy the organic texture and vital … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
flesh — n. 1) to mortify the flesh 2) proud flesh * * * [fleʃ] proud flesh to mortify the flesh … Combinatory dictionary
mortify — mor|ti|fy [ˈmo:tıfaı US ˈmo:r ] v past tense and past participle mortified present participle mortifying third person singular mortifies [T] [Date: 1300 1400; : Old French; Origin: mortifier, from Latin mors; MORTAL1] 1.) to cause someone to feel … Dictionary of contemporary English
mortify — verb (T) 1 be mortified to feel extremely embarrassed or ashamed: She was mortified to think that he had read her diary. 2 mortify the flesh/yourself formal to try to control your natural physical desires and needs by making your body suffer pain … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
mortify — (v.) late 14c., to kill, from O.Fr. mortefiier destroy, overwhelm, punish, from L.L. mortificare cause death, kill, put to death, lit. make dead, from mortificus producing death, from L. mors (gen. mortis) death (see MORTAL (Cf. mortal) (adj.)) + … Etymology dictionary
mortify — v. ( ies, ied) 1 tr. a cause (a person) to feel shamed or humiliated. b wound (a person s feelings). 2 tr. bring (the body, the flesh, the passions, etc.) into subjection by self denial or discipline. 3 intr. (of flesh) be affected by gangrene or … Useful english dictionary
mortify — verb 1) I d be mortified if my friends found out Syn: embarrass, humiliate, chagrin, discomfit, shame, abash, horrify, appall 2) he was mortified at being excluded Syn: hurt, wound, affront … Thesaurus of popular words
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Against the grain — Grain Grain (gr[=a]n), n. [F. grain, L. granum, grain, seed, small kernel, small particle. See {Corn}, and cf. {Garner}, n., {Garnet}, {Gram} the chick pea, {Granule}, {Kernel.}] [1913 Webster] 1. A single small hard seed; a kernel, especially of … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
To go against the grain of — Grain Grain (gr[=a]n), n. [F. grain, L. granum, grain, seed, small kernel, small particle. See {Corn}, and cf. {Garner}, n., {Garnet}, {Gram} the chick pea, {Granule}, {Kernel.}] [1913 Webster] 1. A single small hard seed; a kernel, especially of … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Mortified — Mortify Mor ti*fy, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Mortified}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Mortifying}.] [OE. mortifien, F. mortifier, fr. L. mortificare; L. mors, mortis, death + ficare (in comp.) to make. See {Mortal}, and { fy}.] 1. To destroy the organic texture… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English