Skip to main content

heinously

/hey-nuhs/US // ˈheɪ nəs //UK // (ˈheɪnəs, ˈhiː-) //

令人发指的是,令人发指的,令人发指地,令人发指

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : hateful; odious; abominable; totally reprehensible: a heinous offense.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • France and Germany’s legal codes permit a form of universal jurisdiction, which allows their national courts to prosecute individuals accused of heinous offenses committed in any county.

  • Those Republicans who defended him and his heinous acts will find history holds them to account.

  • Doctors, the FBI and local law enforcement are all called in to not only try to solve a medical mystery, but also a heinous crime.

  • This is a heinous and violent assault on the heart of our democracy.

  • Environmental criminals, authoritarian regimes, tax evaders and financial criminals, drug traffickers, wildlife poachers, and gun runners—all those responsible for the most heinous crimes have turned to anonymous shell companies.

  • “Today, we are before a heinous crime the likes of which are unprecedented in our safe country,” he said.

  • How was he and the brothers Bridgman found guilty, without any physical evidence tying them to this heinous crime?

  • The Israeli response to the heinous crimes committed by Palestinians often seems overkill.

  • Purists sometimes seem to think that disregarding rules about prepositions is as heinous as torturing children.

  • Every year—maybe every month—America is disgraced with an especially heinous lawsuit.

  • He was thrashed at school before the Jews and the hubshi, for the heinous crime of bringing home false reports of progress.

  • It was not a heinous sin, nor would it affect his moral character.

  • Next she was heard discussing and excusing the most heinous crimes of which human nature can be guilty.

  • Still more heinous was the verdict based upon evidence which, if enough in quantity, was manifestly worthless in quality.

  • All three were asked if their offences were not heinous, and if they had not been justly tried and lawfully condemned.