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sordidness

/sawr-did/US // ˈsɔr dɪd //UK // (ˈsɔːdɪd) //

龌龊,污秽,龌龊不堪,肮脏的东西

Related Words

Definitions

adj.形容词 adjective
  1. 1
    • : morally ignoble or base; vile: sordid methods.
    • : meanly selfish, self-seeking, or mercenary.
    • : dirty or filthy.
    • : squalid; wretchedly poor and run-down: sordid housing.

Synonyms & Antonyms

as inmeanness
Synonyms
avarice贪婪,贪欲,贪心,贪污greed贪婪,贪婪的,贪心,贪婪的人malice恶意,恶感,恶性,恶习abjection抛弃,弃婴,弃绝,弃权baseness基本面,基本原则,基本原理,基本的beastliness兽性,兽性十足,兽化,野性closeness亲密性,亲密程度,亲密,亲近corruptness腐败现象,腐败行为,腐败,腐败问题covetousness贪婪,贪心,贪欲,贪婪之心debasement贬低,贬损,堕落,贬值degeneracy退化,退化性,堕落,变质degradation退化,降解,降级,降落disrepute不名誉,声名狼藉,不光彩的事,不光彩的事情frugality节俭,节俭性,节约,俭朴infamy臭名昭著,恶名昭彰,声名狼藉,恶名iniquity不义之财,邪恶,邪恶之处,恶行lowness低度,低位,低水平,低级malignity恶性,恶性事件,弊端,恶性肿瘤miserliness吝啬,守财奴,吝啬鬼,吝啬症parsimony解析,赡养费,旁证,吝啬鬼pettiness娇气,小气,娇弱,琐事rapacity肆意妄为,贪婪,肆意挥霍,暴利shamelessness无耻,无耻之徒,厚颜无耻,无耻行为stinginess吝啬,小气,吝啬鬼,吝啬症unkindness无情,不仁不义,不友善,不仁unscrupulousness不良行为,不择手段,不廉洁,不良现象unworthiness不值得,不称职,不值,不值得拥有wickedness邪恶,恶人,邪恶的人,邪恶的churlishness汹涌澎湃,胆怯,胆小鬼,胆小怕事contemptibleness蔑视性,鄙视,蔑视,鄙视性ill-temper脾气不好,脾气暴躁,脾气不好的人,脾气不好的knavishness骑士精神,骑士风范,骑士风度,小结smallmindedness小心思,心胸狭隘,心胸狭小,小肚鸡肠
as inmisery
Antonyms

Examples

  • Jane was far from alone in what prosecutors describe as a sordid web of abuse and misconduct.

  • Alan Taylor, the distinguished University of Virginia historian, has spent his career upending the conventional story in favor of the more sordid and useful truth.

  • That some of his cartoons from the 1950s are unacceptable to modern audiences, however, is perhaps less surprising than his sordid personal life.

  • The U.K. tabloids, as is their wont, have branded her “shameless,” “sordid,” and “the scourge of society.”

  • Their relationship was messy and sordid and full of lies and jealousy and betrayal and backstabbing.

  • Other micro-countries have more sordid, even criminal, histories.

  • The sordid story of a female co-founder stripped of her title because she was harassed.

  • Are there larger lessons to be learned from this whole sordid tale?

  • When shall fond woman cease to give—when shall mean and sordid man be satisfied with something less than all she has to grant?

  • The expression fitted best the cruder, more sordid method of gaining possession of this woman.

  • By the light of the sordid knowledge that she had revealed to him he paid her back full tale.

  • With this political subjection one is reluctant to associate a more sordid kind of obligation.

  • It was amid such sordid troubles that Jess evolved the idea for her play.