Shame

  • 41shame — [OE] Shame is a general Germanic term, with relatives in German scham, Dutch schaam, and Swedish and Danish skam. Their common ancestor is a prehistoric *skamō, a word of unknown origin. Sham [17] probably originated in a northern English… …

    Word origins

  • 42shame — See: FOR SHAME, PUT TO SHAME …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 43shame — See: FOR SHAME, PUT TO SHAME …

    Dictionary of American idioms

  • 44shame — A sense of disgrace. Various customs in NT times were held to be shameful, such as short hair worn by women or long hair on men (1 Cor. 11:6, 14); the real shame in NT is the guilt attaching to sin (Phil. 3:19). However, there was a shame which… …

    Dictionary of the Bible

  • 45shame — See: for shame, put to shame …

    Словарь американских идиом

  • 46shame —   Hilahila, waia.    ♦ To put to shame, ho ohilahila, ho owaia, ho ohoka.    ♦ What a shame! Aloha ino! …

    English-Hawaiian dictionary

  • 47shame — See guilt/shame …

    Philosophy dictionary

  • 48shame — Gullah Words n and v shame, shames, shamed, shaming, ashamed …

    English dialects glossary

  • 49shame — n 1. disgrace, dishonor, reproach, degradation, illrepute, bad repute, scandal; baseness, turpitude, debasement, vitiation, ingloriousness; ignominy, infamy, odium, opprobrium, condemnation; slur, imputation, aspersion, defamation, denigration,… …

    A Note on the Style of the synonym finder

  • 50shame — gėda statusas T sritis švietimas apibrėžtis Emocinių būsenų kompleksas, pasireiškiantis nemalonia savijauta dėl savo vertės vidinių ar išorės trūkumų, blogo elgesio, kurį pastebi ir neigiamai vertina kiti žmonės. Gėdą išgyvena tie mokiniai, kurie …

    Enciklopedinis edukologijos žodynas