notoriety 的定义
plural no·to·ri·e·ties.
- the state, quality, or character of being notorious or widely known: a craze for notoriety.
- Chiefly British. a notorious or celebrated person.
notoriety 近义词
reputation
更多notoriety例句
- Robinhood has gained notoriety during the pandemic by attracting a massive customer base of younger investors.
- It’s unclear what direct impact the notoriety had on the governments of Trinidad and Tobago or Venezuela.
- Another gained five minutes of notoriety in May as a gym owner arrested for defying public health orders.
- It sometimes takes years to gain the type of authority and notoriety that makes other websites willingly backlink to you as a resource.
- Not only do backlinks send more traffic to your site, but they help you gain notoriety as an authority in your industry.
- Yes, publicizing tragedy gets clicks, gets ad revenue, gets notoriety, and can be done for all the wrong reasons.
- Scalise was a state representative old enough to remember the notoriety of Farrell and Knight from years before.
- Does it matter whether Taylor Swift wants me to inflate my Internet notoriety by doing a dumb thing where I lip sync to her music?
- Whether they win or lose, contestants can be assured of one thing: notoriety as a sex worker.
- Fueled by atrocity and a blitzkrieg of gains in Iraq and Syria, the Islamic State has enjoyed a meteoric climb to notoriety.
- Samuel Jessup died; an opulent English grazier, of pilltaking notoriety.
- Who was the second, who has attained such notoriety in connexion with Nelson's name; and when and where were they married?
- Why, the reduced price of provisions is a matter of universal notoriety, and past all question.
- This event gave Grace Darling the notoriety which her noble conduct so well merited.
- Mr. Minton has acquired a notoriety, even in that proud city, which makes his house one of the most popular resorts.