impugn
impugn — 動詞
- impugnpresent simple I / you / we / they
- impugnshe / she / it
- impugnedpast simple
- impugning-ing form
1. to attack or question someone's honesty, integrity, or value by criticizing them
詆毀;質疑
對他人品格或動機提出質疑
to attack or question someone's honesty, integrity, or value by criticizing them, especially in public
Several journalists publicly impugned the senator's motives during the televised hearing.
幾位記者在電視聽證會上公開質疑該參議員的動機。
impugn + [someone's] motives — transitive pattern
Wei never meant to impugn his colleague's integrity when he questioned the budget figures.
Wei 在質疑預算數字時,並無意詆毀同事的誠信。
The defence lawyer's closing statement seemed intended to impugn the credibility of the main witness.
辯護律師的結辯陳詞似乎意在質疑主要證人的可信度。
Critics have impugned the charity's financial practices, accusing the directors of hiding losses.
批評者質疑該慈善機構的財務做法,指控董事隱瞞虧損。
Talia felt that her supervisor's comments unfairly impugned her professional reputation.
Talia 覺得主管的評論不公平地詆毀了她的專業聲譽。
- challenge
broader meaning; can target facts, decisions, or abilities rather than character
- question
milder tone; may express uncertainty rather than active attack
- attack
more aggressive; can include physical or verbal assault beyond character criticism
- dispute
focuses on factual or legal claims rather than moral character
文法句型
impugn + noun phrase (someone's character, integrity, motives, reputation)
用法筆記
Typically used in formal writing or legal discourse. The direct object of 'impugn' is almost always an abstract noun referring to someone's character, credibility, integrity, motives, or reputation — not a person or concrete object.