英:[rɪ'vaɪlmənt]
美:[rɪ'vaɪlmənt]
英:[rɪ'vaɪlmənt]
美:[rɪ'vaɪlmənt]
词根:revile
vi.revile 辱骂;谩骂
vt.revile 辱骂;斥责
Noun
1. a rude expression intended to offend or hurt;
"when a student made a stupid mistake he spared them no abuse"
"they yelled insults at the visiting team"
"辱骂的行为; 轻蔑或侮辱性的语言",来自1580年代的 revile 和 -ment。更早的名词是 revile 和 reviling(两者都在15世纪中期出现)。
Middle English, from Anglo-French reviler to despise, from re- + vil vile
The first known use of revile was in the 14th century
revise1 of 2verb
to look over again in order to correct or improve
revise a book report
to make a new, corrected, improved, or up-to-date version or arrangement of
revise a dictionary
revise2 of 2noun
an act of revising : revision
revileverb
to speak to or about in an insulting way
revileverb
to speak to or about in an insulting way
1 El Panteón Nacional de los Héroes, an opulent chapel, is the resting place of leaders both revered and reviled.
2 The Duke's mouth foamed over with chaotic revilement.
3 If he let himself be forced to retract them he would give occasion to accusation and revilement against the Romish Church; for the sake of her own honour he must refuse to do so.
4 He flew screaming to a sour cherry tree a short distance away, from which safe vantage point he cursed me with every oath and revilement in his scandalous vocabulary.
5 In reality they were locked in Miss Lucy's trunk, away from chance of Miss Nancy's revilement of their colors and rebukement of her for extravagance.
6 “We haven’t seen a case like this in a long time, with this level of revilement and ostracism and stigmatizing.”
7 A man might take a look, when a new-comer would push him on, and take his place, to be in turn pushed on--and there were laughter and ribaldry and revilements, all for the Nazarene.
8 The man endued with wisdom and learning regards revilement as nectar.
9 Many people reviled him for his callous behavior.
10 If he look for the unity, offspring of our Lord's last prayer, lo! jealousies, hates, revilements, blows instead.
11 Another class were politically ambitious; had ventured upon the revilement of the Democratic principle; had become secessionists per se, and were the instruments and plotters of the treason.
12 The very bitterness, the revilement in solemn terms, of my early instructions, had, reacting, defeated itself.
13 There was singularly little revilement of the Spanish enemy and the bravery of the Spanish soldier and sailor was freely admitted.
14 These attempts of mine to establish my superiority by revilement might have occasioned me amusement to-day, had not their want of straightness and common courtesy been too painful.
15 "Look out, or you will get it again," quickly answered Korableva, adding similar revilement.
16 In my circle, at least, lab-grown meat was met with mistrust that bordered on revilement.
17 Against Münzer's mere words—his preaching and his personal revilements—he was not now concerned to defend himself.
18 Derision and revilement began to lose impetus, flagging in the face of a freshened uproar of another temper, beginning far behind and sweeping down the street after the fugitives.
19 Protect us, O god who art great like Mitra, from guile, from revilement, and from disgrace.
20 And it is our secret sense of this, which, through humiliation and defeat, through mockery and revilement, through want and privation, shall keep us steadfast and of good courage!
1 诽谤
defamatory scandalous libelous slanderous detractive blasphemously injury personality scandal smear defamation slander name-calling vilification calumny aspersion aspersions detraction malediction obloquy backbiting dispraise roorbach detract backbite belibel libel malign vilify blacken blaspheme traduce calumniate asperse