1 to show contempt for; to despise -- mencemuh
They scorned my suggestion.
The boundary of wretched practitioners and refined doctors is again transgressed, and she even scorns the insufficiency of scientific knowledge.
He scorned the device suggested by the author of flinging himself into an armchair.
Even more incongruously it had made him a figure to be courted, albeit not always with great appetite, by the cultural and artistic intelligentsia that had heretofore scorned him.
Really, they were little better than the meridian of the earth, which he had just scorned, because the solid theoretical explanation of invariance was still lacking.
Now she regrets her pride because she fears that her true lover has found another sweetheart and that it will be her turn to be scorned.
She scorned the possibility that these virtues were exploited as a form of social control, and saw hypocrisy as in essence ethical, upholding standards whatever one's personal failures.
He would have scorned to destroy fish with poison or explosives.
Civil liberties, trade union freedom and the freedom of expression continue to be scorned.
中文繁体
輕視,鄙視, 輕蔑地拒絕, 不屑接受…
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轻视,鄙视, 轻蔑地拒绝, 不屑接受…
MoreEspañol
desprecio, despreciar, desprecio [masculine…
MorePortuguês
menosprezo, desdém, menosprezar…
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軽蔑(べつ), あざけり, ~を軽蔑する…
MoreTürk dili
küçümseme, aşağılama, hor görme…
MoreFrançais
mépris [masculine], mépris, mépriser…
MoreCatalan
menyspreu, menysprear…
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