OBLOQUY - definition. What is OBLOQUY
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ترجمة وتحليل الكلمات عن طريق الذكاء الاصطناعي ChatGPT

في هذه الصفحة يمكنك الحصول على تحليل مفصل لكلمة أو عبارة باستخدام أفضل تقنيات الذكاء الاصطناعي المتوفرة اليوم:

  • كيف يتم استخدام الكلمة في اللغة
  • تردد الكلمة
  • ما إذا كانت الكلمة تستخدم في كثير من الأحيان في اللغة المنطوقة أو المكتوبة
  • خيارات الترجمة إلى الروسية أو الإسبانية، على التوالي
  • أمثلة على استخدام الكلمة (عدة عبارات مع الترجمة)
  • أصل الكلمة

%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف


obloquy         
WIKTIONARY REDIRECT
n.
Reproach, detraction, odium, censure, blame, calumny, contumely, slander, defamation, backbiting, traducing, aspersion, reviling.
Obloquy         
WIKTIONARY REDIRECT
·noun Cause of reproach; disgrace.
II. Obloquy ·noun Censorious speech; defamatory language; language that casts contempt on men or their actions; blame; reprehension.
obloquy         
WIKTIONARY REDIRECT
['?bl?kwi]
¦ noun strong public condemnation.
Origin
ME: from late L. obloquium 'contradiction', from L. obloqui, from ob- 'against' + loqui 'speak'.

ويكيبيديا

Obloquy
أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. To answer that Romney is a Christian would have earned the former Baptist preacher obloquy from Protestant and Catholic clergy alike.
2. A provident international strategy should capitalize on Iran’s commitment to NPT instead of driving the proud nation into a corner of obloquy that may leave it no option except to implement its threat of renouncing the treaty.
3. While politicians of all parties are transfixed with horror by the expenses scandal in case their own practice of employing their relatives is suddenly held up to public obloquy, the revelations are likely to have far more serious consequences.
4. The chivalrous Attlee seems primarily to have been motivated by a desire to save the still–living 1st Earl of Halifax from obloquy a Cabinet minute due to be published in an official diplomatic history exposed his effort to sue for peace via Mussolini in 1'40 but the rule the then Prime Minister proposed would have been a hard–and–fast one.
5. The result was the absurdity, in the wake of '/11, of having to construct, at considerable cost and obloquy, a special regime for a handful of foreign extremists who could neither be deported nor allowed to go free because of the dangers they posed to British society.