0 to step heavily on something or someone, causing damage or injury:
1 to act without any respect for someone or something:
She accused the government of trampling on the needs and rights of the ordinary citizen.
He argues that Congress trampled the constitutional rights of legal immigrants in the new welfare reform law.
We created 300 1-m2 plots randomly assigned to controls and four treatments: clumped food supplementation, diffuse food supplementation, removal of leaf litter, and trampled leaf litter.
Still, we could say that his act is impermissible because it would actually require these things being done to people if the munitions are to be trampled.
If they fall down, they stay down, trampled by their companions.
Already, this sodden field has been trampled into a quagmire.
He is himself engaged in destroying everything that the revolution stood for and trampling underfoot its undoubted successes.
Human rights are trampled over on a daily basis, while poverty and misery in both the third world and the developed countries grow worse.
Women are still one of the most vulnerable sections of society, whose rights are rudely trampled underfoot by the current social and economic system.
Political and social rights are being hit and individual rights and democratic freedoms are being trampled underfoot.
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踩, 踩,踐踏, 無視…
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踩, 踩,践踏, 无视…
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踏みつける…
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çiğnemek, ayağı altında ezmek…
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piétiner…
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trepitjar…
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