dishonour
n. 不名誉; 耻辱; 丢脸; 丢脸的人或事
vt. 使(人、家族等)丧失名誉; 拒绝承兑(支票等); 不履行(诺言等)
If you dishonour someone, you behave in a way that damages their good reputation.
It would dishonour my family if I didn't wear the veil.
如果我不戴面纱就会有辱门楣。
Dishonour is a state in which people disapprove of you and lose their respect for you.
...a choice between death and dishonour...
在死亡和耻辱之间作选择
She refuses to see her beloved boy die in such dishonor.
她不愿看到她深爱的男友就这样不名誉地死去。
If someone dishonours an agreement, they refuse to act according to its conditions.
We found that the bank had dishonoured some of our cheques.
我们发现银行拒绝兑现我们的部分支票。
...the dishonoured pledges to British manufacturing.
对英国制造业背弃承诺
1. a state of shame or disgrace;
2. lacking honor or integrity
1. bring shame or dishonor upon;
2. force (someone) to have sex against their will;
3. refuse to accept;
disgrace, humiliate, shame, dishonour
这些动词均含"使丢脸,使受耻辱"之意。
shame, disgrace, embarrassment, dishonour
这些名词均含"丢脸,羞愧"之意。
Is it honouring your husband to dishonour his business?
害得你丈夫的业务倒霉就是尊重他 么 ?
It was as if she felt on her lips the taste of dishonour.
她的嘴唇仿佛尝到了耻辱的滋味.
The students should dishonour their teachers.
学生们不应不尊重他们的老师.
There's no dishonour in losing.
失败并不是耻辱.
Do not blacken your fame, and perish in dishonour!
不要玷污你的名声, 不光彩地毁掉自己!