deplore 的定义
de·plored, de·plor·ing.
- to regret deeply or strongly; lament: to deplore the present state of morality.
- to disapprove of; censure.
- to feel or express deep grief for or in regard to: The class deplored the death of their teacher.
deplore 近义词
regret; condemn
更多deplore例句
- I reached out to several consumer-behavior experts for psychological insight into the struggles of MyPillow owners who deplore Lindell’s message but are devoted to his products — or of fans of any product that becomes the target of a boycott.
- King identified how people, including those who may have deplored Southern injustice, maintained the racial status quo.
- On the one hand, you deplore it because they’ve succeeded in essentially invading our information architecture.
- In her letter declining the award, she deplored the “increasingly brutal impact of racial and economic injustice.”
- I deplore the lawlessness that seems to be sweeping the West Bank with price-tags and land-grabs galore.
- They are about to see what we so often deplore as mere sausage-making, and they will love it.
- It quickly came to mean, to deplore or to disapprove in an especially morally laden way.
- I'm about to quote something pretty deplorable, but not in order to deplore it.
- President Obama may deplore that trend, but he seems to have no very clear idea of how to alter it.
- This was true perhaps, but not in a sense he could find himself tempted to deplore.
- Otherwise he was all that a mother might deplore or an uncle delight in.
- If it has humour, deplore its lack of thoughtfulness; if it is grave, carp at its lack of gaiety.
- Many of the persons we meet with in the world do not live entirely for it, and are incapable of the conduct you deplore.
- It gives me pleasure, my dear, to hear you deplore the loss of such a privilege, as it is a proof that you value it.