immorally是什么意思,immorally中文翻译,immorally发音、用法及例句

•immorally

immorally发音

英:[ɪ'mɒrəlɪ]  美:[ɪ'mɒrəlɪ]

英:  美:

immorally中文意思翻译

adv. 不道德地;品行不良地

immorally同义词

wickedly | dishonestly |corruptly | sinfully | dissolutely | amorally

immorally反义词

morally

immorally常见例句

1 、To ardent pro-lifers, the law today is immorally lax.───在反堕胎人士来看,现在的法律在道德上太宽松了。

2 、But social capital is incorrectly defined as immorally "playing tricks", which affects the role of social capital.───可是许多人把运用社会资本错误地理解为不道德的"耍手腕",从而影响了其作用的有效发挥。

3 、"I don't care!" retorted the angry man. "It's the way YOU feel, and if you weren't so immorally pious you'd be honest and say so."───“我才不在乎呢

4 、She's an immoral woman. I am not! I am not.─── 她就是个* 我不是 我不是

5 、Damage(sb or sb's reputation),eg by suggesting they have acted immorally───玷污(某人或某人的名誉)(如说某人行为不端)

6 、It's not dangerous or immoral or disgusting.─── 不危险 也不是无道德或者恶心

7 、unethical, unethically, immoral, immorally, dissolute───不道德的。无道德的。伤风败俗的。

8 、Capello is aware of the sensitivity surrounding the issue and will not act 'immorally' by encouraging Almunia, who has never represented Spain at any level, to switch nationality.───卡佩罗明白这个话题是多么的敏感,他不会怂恿阿穆尼亚去更换国籍,他可是从未代表过西班牙上场比赛。

9 、he acted immorally when his own interests were at stake.───当他自己的利益受到威胁的时候,他的行动就不合乎道德了。

10 、Erliao Immor tal Tree is a camphor tree of more than 500 years. It is the biggest camphor tree on flat land in Taiwan.───二寮神木属于樟木,树龄约500年以上,为本省平地最大的樟树。这种花樟木(臭樟),适用于建造房屋,但因此地溪流水势不强,无法运送木材,故能维持原貌。

11 、Arthur says what you do here is illegal but not immoral.─── 亚瑟说你们干的事不合法 但也不是缺德的事

12 、She seems to have no principles at all (ie behaves immorally) when it is a question of making money.───一碰到赚钱的事,她就好像完全不顾自己的人格了.

13 、What you're asking me to do is immoral, and...it's illegal.─── 你让我做的事是不道德的 而且是非法的

14 、He was photographed in compromising situations (ie ones that showed him behaving immorally ) with a call-girl.───他和应召女郎在有伤风化的情况下让人拍了照片.

15 、He confessed, "I've never done things immorally and actually obscene.───赵坦言"我没有在道德、事实上做过一件丢人现眼的事"。

16 、If I did something immoral, I would feel bad.─── 如果我做了不道德的事 我会难受

17 、Nor let us act immorally, as some of them did, and twenty-three thousand fell in one day.───我们也不要行奸**、像他们有人行的、一天就倒毙了二万三千人。

18 、What I did with those men it was...immoral, shameful.─── 我和那些男人干的事都是不道德和耻辱的

19 、He is quite without principle, ie behaves immorally.───他完全没有道德观念(做的事不道德).

20 、What we're doing here is illegal, not immoral.─── 我们所做的事是违法的 但并不违背道德

21 、Live immorally───放辟邪侈

22 、What you're doing to those men is immoral.─── 你对那些男人做的事是不道德的

23 、And, yes, immoral or not, they could be in.─── 不管道德与否 他们都可能参与

24 、It is immoral, I redundantly point out.─── 我要多余地指出 这不道德

关于我的暑假的英语作文

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关于我的暑假的英语作文

observance n. A traditional form or customary act.

observant adj. Quick to notice.

observatory n. A building designed for systematic astronomical observations.

obsolescence n. The condition or process of gradually falling into disuse.

obsolescent adj. Passing out of use, as a word.

obsolete adj. No longer practiced or accepted.

obstetrician n. A practitioner of midwifery.

obstetrics n. The branch of medical science concerned with the treatment and care of

women during pregnancy.

obstinacy n. Stubborn adherence to opinion, arising from conceit or the desire to have

one's own way.

obstreperous adj. Boisterous.

obstruct v. To fill with impediments so as to prevent passage, either wholly or in part.

obstruction n. Hindrance.

obtrude v. To be pushed or to push oneself into undue prominence.

obtrusive adj. Tending to be pushed or to push oneself into undue prominence.

obvert v. To turn the front or principal side of (a thing) toward any person or object.

obviate v. To clear away or provide for, as an objection or difficulty.

occasion n. An important event or celebration.

Occident n. The countries lying west of Asia and the Turkish dominions.

occlude v. To absorb, as a gas by a metal.

occult adj. Existing but not immediately perceptible.

occupant n. A tenant in possession of opposite adj. Radically different or contrary in action or movement.

opprobrium n. The state of being scornfully reproached or accused of evil.

optic n. Pertaining to the eye or vision.

optician n. One who makes or deals in optical instruments or eye-glasses.

optics n. The science that treats of light and vision, and all that is connected with sight.

optimism n. The view that everything in nature and the history of mankind is ordered for

the best.

option n. The right, power, or liberty of choosing.

optometry n. Measurement of the powers of vision.

opulence n. Affluence.

opulent adj. Wealthy.

oral adj. Uttered through the mouth.

orate v. To deliver an elaborate or formal public speech.

oration n. An elaborate or formal public speech.

orator n. One who delivers an elaborate or formal speech.

oratorio n. A composition for solo voices, chorus, and orchestra, generally taken from the

Scriptures.

oratory n. The art of public speaking.

ordeal n. Anything that severely tests courage, strength, patience, conscience, etc.

ordinal n. That form of the numeral that shows the order of anything in a series, as first, second, third.

ordination n. A consecration to the ministry.

ordnance n. A general name for all kinds of weapons and their appliances used in war.

papacy n. The official head of the Roman Catholic Church.

papyrus n. The writing-paper of the ancient Egyptians, and later of the Romans.

parable n. A brief narrative founded on real scenes or events usually with a moral.

paradox n. A statement or doctrine seemingly in contradiction to the received belief.

paragon n. A model of excellence.

parallel v. To cause to correspond or lie in the same direction and equidistant in all parts.

parallelism n. Essential likeness.

paralysis n. Loss of the power of contractility in the voluntary or involuntary muscles.

paralyze v. To deprive of the power to act.

paramount adj. Supreme in authority.

paramour n. One who is unlawfully and immorally a lover or a mistress.

paraphernalia n. Miscellaneous articles of equipment or adornment.

paraphrase v. Translate freely.

pare v. To cut, shave, or remove (the outside) from anything.

parentage n. The relation of parent to child, of the producer to the produced, or of cause to

effect.

peerless adj. Of unequaled excellence or worth.

peevish adj. Petulant. (irritable)

pellucid adj. Translucent.

penalty n. The consequences that follow the transgression of natural or divine law.

penance n. Punishment to which one voluntarily submits or subjects himself as an

expression of penitence.

penchant n. A bias in favor of something.

pendant n. Anything that hangs from something else, either for ornament or for use.

pendulous adj. Hanging, especially so as to swing by an attached end or part.

pendulum n. A weight hung on a rod, serving by its oscillation to regulate the rate of a

clock.

penetrable adj. That may be pierced by physical, moral, or intellectual force.

penetrate v. To enter or force a way into the interior parts of.

penetration n. Discernment.

peninsular adj. Pertaining to a piece of land almost surrounded by water.