infamy – מילון אנגלי-אנגלי
infamy
n.
bad reputation, public shame or disgrace; wicked or immoral act
infamy
Noun
1. a state of extreme dishonor; "a date which will live in infamy"- F.D.Roosevelt; "the name was a by-word of scorn and opprobrium throughout the city"
(synonym) opprobrium
(antonym) fame, celebrity, renown
(hypernym) dishonor, dishonour
2. evil fame or public reputation
(antonym) fame
(hypernym) disrepute, discredit
(hyponym) notoriety, ill fame
infamy
Rzecz.
niesława; niegodziwość
Infamy
(n.)
Total loss of reputation; public disgrace; dishonor; ignominy; indignity.
(n.)
That loss of character, or public disgrace, which a convict incurs, and by which he is at common law rendered incompetent as a witness.
(n.)
A quality which exposes to disgrace; extreme baseness or vileness; as, the infamy of an action.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913), edited by Noah Porter.
About
infamy
Synonyms and related words:
abhorrence, abomination, atrocity, bad, degradation, demotion, depluming, desecration, detestation, discredit, disesteem, disgrace, disgracefulness, dishonor, displuming, disrepute, egregiousness, error, evil, hatred, heinousness, ignobility, ignominiousness, ignominy, ill fame, ill repute, infamousness, ingloriousness, iniquity, knavery, loathsomeness, loss of honor, monstrosity, notoriety, notoriousness, obliquity, obloquy, odium, opprobrium, outrage, peccancy, pity, profanation, reprobacy, revulsion, sacrilege, scandal, shame, shamefulness, sin, stigma, terrible thing, vileness, villainy, violation, wickedness, wrong
Source: Moby Thesaurus, which is part of the
Moby Project created by Grady Ward. In 1996 Grady Ward placed this thesaurus in the public domain.