英:['feɪθlɪsnɪs]
美:['feɪθlɪsnɪs]
英:['feɪθlɪsnɪs]
美:['feɪθlɪsnɪs]
n.
不贞
无信仰
不可信赖
无信用
词根:faith
adj.faithful 忠实的,忠诚的;如实的;准确可靠的
faithless 不忠实的;无信的;无宗教信仰的
adv.faithfully 忠实地;如实地;诚心诚意地;深信着地
faithlessly 靠不住地;不忠实地
n.faith 信仰;信念;信任;忠实
Middle English feithles, from feith faith >entry 1 + -les -less
The first known use of faithless was in the 14th century
falconnoun
a hawk trained for use in falconry
any of various swift hawks with long pointed wings, a long tail, and a notch on the upper half of the beak for killing prey
fakirnoun
a Muslim beggar : dervish
a wandering Hindu holy person who performs feats of magic
fake1 of 3adjective
not genuine : phony
fake2 of 3noun
an imitation that is passed off as genuine : counterfeit
impostor
a medical fake
fake3 of 3verb
to change or treat so as to make false
faked the results
counterfeit entry 1 sense 1
fake a rare first edition
pretend entry 1 sense 1, simulate
fake surprise
fake1 of 3adjective
not genuine : phony
fake2 of 3noun
an imitation that is passed off as genuine : counterfeit
impostor
a medical fake
fake3 of 3verb
to change or treat so as to make false
faked the results
counterfeit entry 1 sense 1
fake a rare first edition
pretend entry 1 sense 1, simulate
fake surprise
fake1 of 3adjective
not genuine : phony
fake2 of 3noun
an imitation that is passed off as genuine : counterfeit
impostor
a medical fake
fake3 of 3verb
to change or treat so as to make false
faked the results
counterfeit entry 1 sense 1
fake a rare first edition
pretend entry 1 sense 1, simulate
fake surprise
fake1 of 3adjective
not genuine : phony
fake2 of 3noun
an imitation that is passed off as genuine : counterfeit
impostor
a medical fake
fake3 of 3verb
to change or treat so as to make false
faked the results
counterfeit entry 1 sense 1
fake a rare first edition
pretend entry 1 sense 1, simulate
fake surprise
fake1 of 3adjective
not genuine : phony
fake2 of 3noun
an imitation that is passed off as genuine : counterfeit
impostor
a medical fake
fake3 of 3verb
to change or treat so as to make false
faked the results
counterfeit entry 1 sense 1
fake a rare first edition
pretend entry 1 sense 1, simulate
fake surprise
faithlessadjective
not true to allegiance or duty : disloyal
not worthy of being trusted or relied upon
1 European treaties, like European diplomacy, have in the past, served only to illustrate the duplicity and faithlessness of monarchs.
2 Thus, the most startling fault of the age being its faithlessness, it is necessary that its greatest man should be faithless.
3 No charge of faithlessness ought to be lightly uttered.
不可轻易地控告某人不贞。
4 In this piece, the voice of God accused the Jewish people of faithlessness in rejecting Jesus as their Messiah and crucifying him instead.
5 She sang about babies, mothers, good and bad boyfriends, faith and faithlessness, and sounded fine.
6 Meanwhile the citizens stagger about “in this dreadful abyss of brokenness, this dead valley of hopelessness, this nethermost pit of faithlessness.”
7 The company is suing the faithless investors and is being sued itself by other investors who claim they were misled.
8 Queen Eleanor, whom he alienated by his faithlessness, stirred up her sons to rebellion; and they had grievances enough to be easily persuaded.
9 The tragedy is so old that its horror has leached away and only a certain air of faithlessness and melancholy clings to the stones and shadows of the house.
10 Shall this precious thing perish through your faithlessness to so sublime a trust?
11 Thus , they argue: "'Unintelligibility'resulting from faithfulness is worse than faithlessness that makes translation'intelligible '. "
故此主张 “ 与其忠实而使人看不懂,毋宁不很忠实而看得懂. ”
12 The days and nights are beautiful, white sand and green grass and blue breakers, but full of alcohol and faithlessness; Gatsby’s parties, all “whisperings and champagne and stars”, whirl around an empty core.
13 It has a celestial quality to it, the corollary, perhaps, of the songs addressing mainman Frederick Coldwell's ideas about faith, or rather faithlessness.
14 And only around 160 faithless ballots have been cast in U.S. history.
15 Gun laws, however, do not fall into that category, and this move to flout them is a display of faithlessness in our democracy.
16 faithless friends who deserted him in his time of need
17 The narrator muses: “I had left him to his faithlessness — yes, in the end, I had been the one to do the leaving.”
18 When that is spent, we are left to our intrinsic poverty of soul, to our faithlessness and feebleness.
19 She fell on the floor, apologizing to God for her faithlessness.
20 They can offer the full record of faithlessness in abject penitence, witnessing for repentance and redemption even at risk of martyrdom.