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EN
English
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Português
Русский
Portuguese
atacar
Spanish
abochornar
Catalan
avergonyir
Force (someone) to have sex against their will.
shame
assault
rape
disgrace
outrage
violate
ravish
attaint
Portuguese
atacar
Portuguese
desonra
Catalan
deshonra
A state of shame or disgrace.
dishonor
honor
Portuguese
desonra
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
!
1
Perhaps they want walk away from marriage without causing too much
dishonour
.
2
She places us between war and
dishonour
;
the choice cannot be doubtful.
3
He is that guest whom all the wooers
dishonour
in the hall.'
4
This was the woe of France more even than the military
dishonour
.
5
Indeed, it feels as though it would
dishonour
her memory not to.
6
You
dishonour
the King and his office very much, said the Duke.
7
He will always carry the
dishonour
,
the stain of blood cowardly shed.
8
As far as in me lay, I have done Thee no
dishonour
.
9
She had not even the opportunity to choose between
dishonour
and annihilation.
10
There are times when one has to laugh-oroverwhelm oneself in
dishonour
.
11
Some, less speedy than the rest, fell on the field of
dishonour
.
12
She was the
dishonour
of her sex, her situation, and her years.
13
He had all along been goaded by a vague sense of
dishonour
.
14
Nor would death itself have shielded their reputations from hatchments of
dishonour
.
15
The
dishonour
would come in if you'd left off caring for her.
16
Boileau, who was quite without means, completed his
dishonour
by accepting it.
dishonour
·
bring dishonour
such dishonour
own dishonour
be no dishonour
sow in dishonour
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