|
简明英汉词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| [E5fens] | ||
| n. | ||
| 进攻 | ||
|
美国传统词典[双解] | ||
|
offense | |
| of.fense | ||
| AHD:[…-fμns“] | ||
| D.J.[*6fens] | ||
| K.K.[*6fWns] | ||
| n.(名词) | ||
(1) |
The act of causing anger, resentment, displeasure, or affront. | |
| 冒犯:使产生愤怒、憎恨、不愉快或恼怒的行为 | ||
(2) |
The state of being offended. | |
| 被冒犯的状态 | ||
(3) |
A violation or an infraction of a moral or social code; a transgression or a sin. | |
| 违反:违反或打破道德或社会规范;一种侵犯或犯罪 | ||
(4) |
A transgression of law; a crime. | |
| 违法:违反法律;一种犯罪 | ||
(5) |
Something that outrages moral sensibilities: | |
| 违反道德的事物:引起道德感情上的愤恨的事物: | ||
| Genocide is an offense to all civilized human beings. | ||
| 种族灭绝违反文明人的道德规范的罪行 | ||
(6) |
[?f“μns”] The act of attacking or assaulting. | |
| [?f“μns”] 袭击:袭击或攻击的行为 | ||
(7) |
[?f“μns”] Sports | |
| [?f“μns”] 【体育运动】 | ||
(8) |
A team in possession of the ball or puck. | |
| 控有球的一队:球或冰球在自己手里的球队 | ||
(9) |
Scoring ability or potential. | |
| 得分率:得分的能力或潜力 | ||
(10) |
The means or tactics used in an attempt to score points. | |
| 技巧,手段:为获得分数而使用的方式或策略 | ||
|
语源 | ||
(1) |
Middle English | |
| 中古英语 | ||
(2) |
from Old French ofense | |
| 源自 古法语 ofense | ||
(3) |
from Latin off?a [from feminine past participle of] offendere [to offend] * see offend | |
| 源自 拉丁语 off?a [] 源自offendere的阴性过去分词 [冒犯] *参见 offend | ||
|
参考词汇 | ||
(1) |
offense, crime, sin, error | |
(2) |
These nouns are related in denoting a violation or an infraction of a moral, social, or legal code. | |
| 这些名词都与对道德、社会或法律规范的违反或打破有关。 | ||
(3) |
Offense applies most broadly: | |
| Offense 用得最广: | ||
| The phrase between you and I is often considered an offense against proper usage. | ||
| 短语在你我之间 常常被认为是不合一般规则的用法。 | ||
| Juveniles convicted of criminal offenses are sent to reformatories. | ||
| 犯了罪的青少年都被送去改造。 | ||
(4) |
Crime refers both to an act committed or omitted in violation of—and punishable by—law and to a serious or grave offense: | |
| Crime 指故意犯的罪行或疏忽造成的罪行,违反法律并能被法律惩罚的,或指一项严重或重大的犯罪: | ||
| “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors” (U.S. Constitution, Article II) | ||
| “叛国、受贿或其它高级犯罪和重罪” (美国宪法,第二款), | ||
| “Is it . . . a crime to love too well?” (Alexander Pope). A sin is a transgression of religious or moral law; more loosely it applies to something regarded as being utterly wrong: | ||
| “难道…爱得太深也是一种过错?” (亚历山大·波普)。Sin 是一种对于宗教或道德法规的违反, 它更广泛地被用于被认为完全错误的事物: | ||
| “The sins of the fathers are to be laid upon the children” (Shakespeare). | ||
| “父辈们的罪过将担在孩子身上” (莎士比亚)。 | ||
| “The only deadly sin I know is cynicism” (Henry L. Stimson). | ||
| “我所知道的唯一致命的错误的事是愤世嫉俗” (亨利·L·斯廷森)。 | ||
(5) |
Error is departure from what is morally right; the term often suggests bad judgment or lack of awareness rather than willful violation: | |
| Error 是偏离道德正确的。这个术语常含有因判断错误或缺乏认识而非有意违反之意: | ||
| “All men are liable to error; and most men are . . . under temptation to it” (John Locke). | ||
| “所有的人都会犯错误;大多数人都会…受它的诱惑”。 (约翰·洛克) | ||
|
现代英汉词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| [E5fens] | ||
| n. | ||
(1) |
过错;犯罪 | |
| His offences were forgiven him by the employer. | ||
| 他的过错受到老板的宽恕。 | ||
| It is an offense to drive a car at night without lights. | ||
| 夜晚行车不开灯是违章的。 | ||
(2) |
令人 不快的事物 | |
(3) |
触怒;不悦;冒犯 | |
| give offense to sb. | ||
| 得罪某人;使某人不悦 | ||
| I meant no offense. | ||
| 我没有冒犯你的意思。(英作: offence) | ||
|
现代英汉综合大辞典 | ||
|
offense | |
| [E5fens] | ||
| n. | ||
| [美]=offence | ||
|
美国传统词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| of.fense | ||
| AHD:[…-fμns“] | ||
| D.J.[*6fens] | ||
| K.K.[*6fWns] | ||
| n. | ||
(1) |
The act of causing anger, resentment, displeasure, or affront. | |
(2) |
The state of being offended. | |
(3) |
A violation or an infraction of a moral or social code; a transgression or a sin. | |
(4) |
A transgression of law; a crime. | |
(5) |
Something that outrages moral sensibilities: | |
| Genocide is an offense to all civilized human beings. | ||
(6) |
[?f“μns”] The act of attacking or assaulting. | |
(7) |
[?f“μns”] Sports | |
(8) |
A team in possession of the ball or puck. | |
(9) |
Scoring ability or potential. | |
(10) |
The means or tactics used in an attempt to score points. | |
|
语源 | ||
(1) |
Middle English | |
(2) |
from Old French ofense | |
(3) |
from Latin off?a [from feminine past participle of] offendere [to offend] * see offend | |
|
参考词汇 | ||
(1) |
offense, crime, sin, error | |
(2) |
These nouns are related in denoting a violation or an infraction of a moral, social, or legal code. | |
(3) |
Offense applies most broadly: | |
| The phrase between you and I is often considered an offense against proper usage. | ||
| Juveniles convicted of criminal offenses are sent to reformatories. | ||
(4) |
Crime refers both to an act committed or omitted in violation of—and punishable by—law and to a serious or grave offense: | |
| “treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors” (U.S. Constitution, Article II) | ||
| “Is it . . . a crime to love too well?” (Alexander Pope). A sin is a transgression of religious or moral law; more loosely it applies to something regarded as being utterly wrong: | ||
| “The sins of the fathers are to be laid upon the children” (Shakespeare). | ||
| “The only deadly sin I know is cynicism” (Henry L. Stimson). | ||
(5) |
Error is departure from what is morally right; the term often suggests bad judgment or lack of awareness rather than willful violation: | |
| “All men are liable to error; and most men are . . . under temptation to it” (John Locke). | ||
|
英汉法学大词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| n.犯法行为,犯罪 | ||
|
英汉航海大词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| n.过错,攻击 | ||
|
英汉化学大词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| n.过错,攻击,令人讨厌的事物,冒犯 | ||
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英汉经贸大词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| n.过错,攻击,令人讨厌的事物 | ||
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英汉计算机大词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| n.过错(攻击,令人讨厌的事物 | ||
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英汉能源大词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| n.过错,攻击,令人讨厌的事物 | ||
|
英汉水利大词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| n.攻击,违反,违法 | ||
|
英汉心理学大词典 | ||
|
offense | |
| 犯罪 | ||