0 the opinion that people have about someone or something based on their behaviour or character in the past -- ün, şöhret, nam
Both hotels have a good reputation.
He has a reputation for efficiency.
Once elected, senators had to develop reputations that translated into support among party organization regulars as well as directly among their constituents.
From an elder's point of view, even infrequent contacts and instrumental support from distant children affirmed their familial bonds and reputations in the community.
Householders in more egalitarian ' stateless ' societies had to build up their reputations by hand, establishing prosperous homesteads and defending their reputations against other people's slurs.
Unregulated words often mocked authority, questioned policy and trimmed reputations.
To the extent that reputations emerge through gossip and social networks, language cannot be ignored as an important means of signal broadcast and signal manipulation.
Most of the contributors rightly have international reputations, and the book certainly deals with crucial issues.
The check on the agencies' power, in this ideal scenario, is the need to preserve their reputations.
By such lobbying and deal cutting are personal reputations built.
中文繁体
名譽, 聲望, 名望…
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名誉, 声望, 名望…
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reputación, fama, reputación [feminine…
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reputação…
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評判, 世評…
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réputation [feminine], réputation…
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reputació, fama…
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سُمْعة…
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