violator 的定义
vi·o·lat·ed, vi·o·lat·ing.
- to break, infringe, or transgress.
- to break in upon or disturb rudely; interfere thoughtlessly with: to violate his privacy.
- to break through or pass by force or without right: to violate a frontier.
- to treat irreverently or disrespectfully; desecrate; profane: violate a human right.
- to molest sexually, especially to rape.
violator 近义词
等同于 wrongdoer
violator 的近义词 11 个
violator 的反义词 1 个
更多violator例句
- Proctorio’s Olsen said Johnson made false assumptions about the system and violated the company’s rules and copyrights.
- However, assuming that the EC concludes Amazon is found to have violated the law, it could impose massive fines.
- Per the Associated Press, Milwaukee City Attorney Tearman Spencer approved the settlement amount along with an admission from the city that Brown’s constitutional rights were violated.
- The Baton Rouge Police Department has placed three officers on administrative leave after LSU wide receiver Koy Moore wrote Sunday on Twitter that he had been “violated” by the officers during an incident Saturday night.
- Brown, the seven-time Pro Bowl wide receiver signed by the Buccaneers just before the expiration of his eight-game suspension for violating the NFL’s personal conduct policy, had three catches for 31 yards in his first game for his new team.
- When an entity is designated as a sanctions violator it can be catastrophic.
- After exiting Def Jam Records in 2000, Lighty would strike out on his own, forming Violator Management and Violator Records.
- Police say Chris Lighty, the Violator Records founder and legendary manager, killed himself.
- Violator would soon suffer financially as the music industry experienced a downturn.
- Nay, even eternal ruin awaits the impenitent violator of Covenant engagements.
- If any dare do so, he shall be deemed a violator of the Commune, and justice shall be enforced upon his person and his property.
- She had known too many hours of anguish in the doom set on her life because she had been deemed a violator of the law.
- In Inglaterra, that violator of his own daughter, and the domestic thief would have been given the death sentence on the gallows.
- It seems that the little violator of law can be punished; the big violator cannot be, or, at any rate, is not punished.