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Meanings of
dishonor
in English
Portuguese
atacar
Spanish
abochornar
Catalan
avergonyir
Back to the meaning
Force (someone) to have sex against their will.
shame
assault
rape
disgrace
outrage
violate
ravish
attaint
Portuguese
atacar
Russian
бесчестие
Portuguese
desonra
Catalan
deshonra
Back to the meaning
A state of shame or disgrace.
dishonour
honor
Russian
бесчестие
Synonyms
Examples for "
shame
"
shame
assault
rape
disgrace
outrage
Examples for "
shame
"
1
It is not you who bears the
shame
;
I am the one.
2
Be it so: one can bear that; jealousy is the real
shame
.
3
Guest flushed with embarrassment; with something deeper than embarrassment; with honest
shame
.
4
The soldier hung his head in
shame
and led the horse away.
5
With
shame
Desire noticed that the lessons in the Quarterly were dated.
1
Research is mixed on whether the
assault
-
rifle
ban had a significant impact.
2
EU countries have threatened to impose sanctions on Turkey over the
assault
.
3
National pathways manager Kris Gagliardi said
assault
cases go up each December.
4
British Transport Police said they are investigating the incident as common
assault
.
5
The
assault
began in the early morning and continued throughout the day.
1
Second, police often fail to believe
rape
victims and conduct full investigations.
2
A common form of violence in the family unit is marital
rape
.
3
Reports of
rape
and domestic violence are increasing, according to Garda statistics.
4
The same thing operates in
rape
,
in burglary, and in other crimes.
5
Examples mentioned include incest,
rape
porn, underage content or child abuse material.
1
That could so often lead to
disgrace
at the court martial table.
2
To be sent home in
disgrace
,
having caused a major interspecies incident?
3
Some viewed the ban as a national
disgrace
but you know what?
4
She would need to know who had personally witnessed my public
disgrace
.
5
ACT Party leader David Seymour said the attendance figures were a
disgrace
.
1
One case sparked national
outrage
,
forcing the government to recognize DGCIM abuse.
2
Trump stopped separating families last month following public
outrage
and court challenges.
3
Another week and it's another case of public
outrage
,
this time Killarney.
4
The effects of immigration detention on refugees' health should
outrage
our nation.
5
Public
outrage
reached a boiling point, with critical testimonials flooding social media.
1
She said the proposal doesn't
violate
the second amendment or state laws.
2
Legal experts say such an effort would likely
violate
federal commerce law.
3
The Justice Department also said the agreement appeared to
violate
the law.
4
TikTok also said the ban would
violate
the company's First Amendment rights.
5
Many banks won't work with them because their operations
violate
federal law.
1
The gods were supposed to
ravish
feckless girls, not hardened Achaean warriors.
2
He'll rip off his pants and
ravish
the lady on the spot!
3
Turkeys mistake Jeff for female bird in heat and attempt to
ravish
him.
4
The perfect symmetry of this marvellous structure would
ravish
Michel Angelo.
5
Is this the moment where I get to
ravish
you both?
1
That perceived Sir Bors, and suffered him till he was nigh
attaint
.
2
For yourself, you are, by the Prince's evidence, freed from the
attaint
.
3
It is an
attaint
upon character; a sort of privateering on family property.
4
Such secrets, gentle reader, might, if revealed,
attaint
the lady's character.
5
Beaming in beauty, supreme in virtue, the resplendent aegis of truth shields her from
attaint
!
Usage of
dishonor
in English
1
She has brought the first
dishonor
to the Southard name in America.
2
Do not
dishonor
its holy character; do not faint upon the way.
3
The
dishonor
of breaking them were nothing to the wrong of fulfillment.
4
To desert was to face death; to remain was to wed
dishonor
.
5
That is, indeed, the greatest profanation and
dishonor
of the divine name.
6
Potiphar's wife surpasses all the women yet mentioned in perfidy and
dishonor
.
7
She was then married, and it would bring
dishonor
to no one.
8
You should be more afraid of
dishonor
than of-ofthe other things.
9
Ruin, disgrace,
dishonor
,
degradation, an abyss of infamy; that is the matter.
10
But to take it under such conditions would be to
dishonor
both.
11
Human beings feel
dishonor
the most, sometimes, when they most deserve it.
12
But Arria would not believe that Vergilius had been guilty of
dishonor
.
13
Given a secure income, and I should never have stooped to
dishonor
.
14
I am a Jewess, and any contact with me would
dishonor
you.
15
Turning his back on jackals would have stung them to worse
dishonor
.
16
It would be a
dishonor
to her memory to do anything else.
Other examples for "dishonor"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
About this term
dishonor
Noun
Singular
Verb
Indicative · Present
Frequent collocations
bring dishonor
such dishonor
be no dishonor
personal dishonor
sow in dishonor
More collocations
Translations for
dishonor
Portuguese
atacar
desgraçar
violentar
estuprar
atentar
desonrar
desonra
vergonha
Spanish
abochornar
violar
avergonzar
deshonrar
Catalan
avergonyir
avergonyir-se
refusar
negar-se a pagar
deshonrar
deshonra
deshonor
Russian
бесчестие
позор
бесславие
Dishonor
through the time
Dishonor
across language varieties
United Kingdom
Common
United States of America
Common