disbelieve 的 2 个定义
dis·be·lieved, dis·be·liev·ing.
- to have no belief in; refuse or reject belief in: to disbelieve reports of UFO sightings.
dis·be·lieved, dis·be·liev·ing.
- to refuse or reject belief; have no belief.
disbelieve 近义词
doubt
更多disbelieve例句
- The courts were almost twice as likely to disbelieve the mothers’ claims of abuse in those scenarios.
- Here is the part most people are unaware of or disbelieve because it seems like it may be crystal healing pseudoscience.
- Due out on Friday, the report’s expected assertion that no classified American programs exist to explain the observations will most likely be dismissed by those primed to disbelieve government pronouncements.
- Even if we set aside these reasons to disbelieve Carlson’s theory and the fact that the government isn’t supposed to cite government agents as unindicted co-conspirators, it’s still a massive leap to assume that these people were government agents.
- I was supposed to disbelieve everything the Israelis just told me.
- I have looked down on dead Marines this way, trying to disbelieve them back to life.
- You may disbelieve the promise, but I'm afraid you can't simply instruct the voters to agree with you.
- There's another reason to disbelieve in a conspiracy: the number comes too late to do any good.
- Some" may disbelieve these things, but even among conservatives, it is unlikely to be a very big "some.
- We must disbelieve the alleged fact, or believe that we were mistaken in admitting the supposed law.
- He must still either believe in witchcraft or disbelieve all of the Bible.
- Sitting opposite to this cynical man of the world and listening to his talk, Hyacinth came himself to disbelieve in principle.
- I disbelieve in this commercial selfishness emphasized in the text.
- We should indeed be reduced to a most distressing dilemma, if we were to disbelieve every thing we cannot fully comprehend.