penalize 的定义
pe·nal·ized, pe·nal·iz·ing.
- to subject to a penalty, as a person.
- to declare punishable by law or rule.
- to put under a disadvantage or handicap.
penalize 近义词
punish
更多penalize例句
- Doing that will surely get you penalized and or even banned from Google.
- Zacche’s attorney said the former chief shouldn’t have been penalized as severely as he was.
- Employees ended up being penalized for getting too close, the Guardian article alleges, even if it wasn’t their fault.
- He was penalized two strokes, and the incident followed him onto the course the following week during Presidents Cup play.
- Also, you’ll be at higher risk of getting penalized due to duplicate content.
- Major League Baseball actually does not penalize usage in the bigs, but does crack down on minor leaguers.
- So when Sotnikova stepped out of her jumping combination, the judges did penalize her.
- If we financially penalize good medicine, we cannot expect it to flourish.
- Retailers penalize those who block off a lot of time as unavailable by giving them fewer hours.
- Barry was also known to penalize friends who wasted precioussmoke ( i.e. not performing TA) by denying them a hit.
- This would give compelling effect to distance as a factor, and would tend to penalize the roundabout carriage of goods.
- He thinks we are thieves and scoundrels and tearers up of treaties, because we did not penalize ourselves!
- “I think it was pretty rough, Mr. Upton, to penalize him for an unintentional foul,” said Morrill.
- We penalize ourselves every time we run a train without full tonnage.
- The act referred to prohibits slavery, but does not penalize it.