disrepute
/ˌdɪsrɪˈpjuːt/ (bre, ipa) · [dˌɪsrɪpjˈut] /ˌdɪsrɪˈpjuːt/ (ame, ipa) · [dˌɪsrɪpjˈut] /ˌdis-ri-ˈpyüt How to pronounce disrepute (audio)/ (ame, mw)
disrepute — 名詞
1. a situation in which a person, group, or institution is widely thought of badly
聲譽受損
失去他人信任與尊重的狀態
a situation in which a person, group, or institution is widely thought of badly and no longer receives trust or respect.
After the bribery scandal, the mayor's office fell into disrepute across the city.
貪污醜聞後,市長辦公室在全市聲譽受損。
fall into disrepute (lose public respect)
Christopher feared the lawsuit would bring the family business into disrepute.
Christopher 擔心那場官司會讓家族企業名聲掃地。
bring something into disrepute
Years of false advertising left the health brand in disrepute.
多年來的假廣告讓那個保健品牌聲譽受損。
Several judges said the leak had brought the court system into disrepute.
幾位法官說,那次洩密事件讓整個法院體系名聲掃地。
The nightclub remained in disrepute long after the police raid.
警方突襲過後很久,那家夜店仍然聲譽受損。
- bad reputation
the everyday phrase; less formal and more direct
- disgrace
stronger; often tied to one shameful event or act
- infamy
suggests being widely known for something bad
- notoriety
focuses on public fame for bad reasons, not only loss of respect
- respect
general positive regard from other people
- esteem
more formal; emphasizes admiration as well as respect
- good standing
often used for professions, organizations, or official status
文法句型
fall into disrepute
bring something into disrepute
be in disrepute
用法筆記
Most often follows verbs like 'fall into', 'bring ... into', or 'remain in'. It describes a bad public reputation that many people can see, not a private feeling of shame or regret.