shame

/ʃeɪm/ (bre, ipa) · /ʃeɪm/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈshām/ (ame, mw)

shame — noun

1. a situation, event, or fact that makes you feel sad or disappointed because it i

1.名詞A2
釋義

a situation, event, or fact that makes you feel sad or disappointed because it is not as good as it should be or could have been

例句

It's a real shame that Feng could not come to the party tonight.

a shame + that-clause

What a shame that the old library was closed down last year.

What a shame

同義詞
  • pity

    softer, less intense than 'a shame'; very common in everyday conversation

  • disappointment

    focuses on the let-down feeling rather than the unfortunate circumstance itself

文法句型

it's a shame + that-clause

what a shame

a shame + to-infinitive

用法筆記

Unlike other senses of shame, this sense is always used with the indefinite article 'a': it's a shame / what a shame.

常見錯誤

It is shame that he lost his job.
It is a shame that he lost his job.
💡This sense requires the article 'a' before 'shame'.

2. the painful emotion that arises inside you after doing something wrong, embarras

2.名詞B1
釋義

the painful emotion that arises inside you after doing something wrong, embarrassing, or inappropriate

例句

Tariq felt a deep sense of shame after lying to his mother about the missing money.

sense of shame

Renata hung her head in shame when the teacher announced that she had cheated on the test.

in shame — describes how someone physically shows shame

同義詞
  • guilt

    focuses on wrongdoing itself rather than the social embarrassment aspect of shame

  • embarrassment

    lighter in intensity; about awkwardness rather than moral failure

  • remorse

    stronger, more formal; focuses on regret for harming someone

反義詞
  • pride

    a feeling of satisfaction in one's own or another's achievements

  • honour

    respect earned through good behaviour, the opposite of feeling shame

文法句型

feel shame

sense of shame

with shame

in shame

no shame

用法筆記

Commonly follows prepositions 'with', 'in', or 'out of' (e.g., 'with shame', 'out of shame'). 'Shame' in this sense is uncountable and never takes 'a'.

常見錯誤

He felt a shame for what he did.
He felt shame for what he did.
💡This sense of shame is uncountable, so no article is needed.

3. the condition of losing the good opinion that others had of you because of somet

3.名詞B2
釋義

the condition of losing the good opinion that others had of you because of something wrong or unacceptable that you did, or because of something done by someone connected to you

例句

The corruption scandal brought shame on the entire government department.

bring shame on [group/people]

Gabriel chose to resign quietly rather than face the shame of being publicly dismissed from his job.

同義詞
  • disgrace

    very close in meaning; 'disgrace' often implies a stronger public component

  • dishonour

    more formal and literary; focuses on loss of personal integrity

  • ignominy

    formal and literary; public humiliation, especially after failure

反義詞
  • honour

    public respect and esteem

  • credit

    recognition for doing something good

文法句型

bring shame on/upon + noun

shame + of + gerund

no shame in + gerund

用法筆記

Distinguish from Sense 2: Sense 2 describes an internal emotion (feeling ashamed), while Sense 3 describes a social condition (being disgraced in the eyes of others). 'Bring shame on' is a fixed collocation that belongs to this sense.

常見錯誤

His actions brought shame to his family.
His actions brought shame on his family.
💡The correct preposition is 'on' (or 'upon'), not 'to'.

4. used in the phrase 'put someone to shame', meaning to cause a person to experien

4.名詞B2
釋義

used in the phrase 'put someone to shame', meaning to cause a person to experience embarrassment or discomfort by showing that their behaviour is wrong or that your own standard is higher than theirs

例句

Anong's kindness put her colleagues who never volunteered to shame.

put [person] to shame — showing a higher standard

The documentary put the government's lack of action on climate change to shame.

文法句型

put [someone/something] to shame

用法筆記

This sense is almost always used in the fixed expression 'put to shame'. The verb 'put' changes form with the subject (puts/put/will put etc.), but 'to shame' remains fixed.

5. used in the expression 'shame to say' or 'ashamed to admit', when you feel embar

5.名詞B1
釋義

used in the expression 'shame to say' or 'ashamed to admit', when you feel embarrassed about admitting something, especially a personal weakness or failure

例句

I shame to say that I still have not read a single book by our country's most famous author.

shame to say + that-clause

Lan is ashamed to admit that she was responsible for the mistake that cost the company the contract.

ashamed to admit + that-clause

文法句型

be ashamed to say/admit/confess

shame to say

用法筆記

The expression 'shame to say' (without a verb) is slightly old-fashioned or formal. The more common modern pattern is 'ashamed to say/admit'. This sense is always in the first or second person.

6. used when speaking firmly to someone to say that their action was wrong and they

6.名詞B1
釋義

used when speaking firmly to someone to say that their action was wrong and they ought to regret it, showing that you strongly disapprove of what they did

例句

Shame on you for making fun of a classmate who was trying his best.

shame on you for + gerund

Shame on the company for refusing to pay its workers a fair wage.

shame on [someone] — extending to non-personal subjects

文法句型

shame on + pronoun/noun

用法筆記

This expression is quite strong and direct. It is used when the speaker feels morally superior or disappointed. It can be addressed to a specific person ('Shame on you') or a group/institution ('Shame on the council').

7. used in the phrase 'put something to shame', meaning to be so much better or mor

7.名詞C1
釋義

used in the phrase 'put something to shame', meaning to be so much better or more impressive that the other thing seems bad or low-quality by comparison

例句

The quality of the food at the small street stall put the expensive restaurant's dishes to shame.

put [something] to shame — comparison of quality

Élise's garden, with its beautiful flowers and careful design, put all the neighbours' gardens to shame.

文法句型

put [something/someone] to shame

用法筆記

Distinguish from Sense 4: Sense 4 focuses on making someone feel embarrassment for their behaviour; Sense 7 focuses on one thing being objectively better than another. In Sense 7, the subject is typically a thing (product, performance, achievement), not a person's action.

shame — verb

shame — exclamation