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 reputation [`rɛpjə'teʃən]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 名誉, 名声, 声望

[法] 名声, 名誉, 公认证据




    reputation
    [ noun ]
    1. the state of being held in high esteem and honor

    2. <noun.state>
    3. notoriety for some particular characteristic

    4. <noun.state>
      his reputation for promiscuity
    5. the general estimation that the public has for a person

    6. <noun.cognition>
      he acquired a reputation as an actor before he started writing
      he was a person of bad report


    Reputation \Rep`u*ta"tion\ (-t?"sh?n), n. [F. r['e]putation, L.
    reputatio a reckoning, consideration. See {Repute}, v. t.]
    1. The estimation in which one is held; character in public
    opinion; the character attributed to a person, thing, or
    action; repute.

    The best evidence of reputation is a man's whole
    life. --Ames.

    2. (Law) The character imputed to a person in the community
    in which he lives. It is admissible in evidence when he
    puts his character in issue, or when such reputation is
    otherwise part of the issue of a case.

    3. Specifically: Good reputation; favorable regard; public
    esteem; general credit; good name.

    I see my reputation is at stake. --Shak.

    The security of his reputation or good name.
    --Blackstone.

    4. Account; value. [Obs.] --Chaucer.

    [/Christ] made himself of no reputation. --Phil. ii.
    7.

    Syn: Credit; repute; regard; estimation; esteem; honor; fame.
    See the Note under {Character}.

    1. But Loc, who grew up in a two-story house on the affluent west side of Los Angeles and went to University High School and Santa Monica College, had to travel by bus to the city's tough south side to get his reputation.
    2. But even though the worst has passed, the airline's reputation for shoddy service continues to haunt it, and many service problems remain intractable.
    3. Mr. Souter doesn't have any reputation for the kind of conservative judicial activism that aroused fierce opposition to President Reagan's nomination of Robert Bork in 1987.
    4. The book made his international reputation and put him on the cover of Time magazine.
    5. In recent weeks, the company has taken out full-page newspaper advertisements nationwide to say that it has a long-standing reputation for business integrity.
    6. Several critics expressed fears that the program would hurt Portland's reputation.
    7. The Zurich public must have wondered where Dr Miller earned his reputation. There was some compensation in Eliahu Inbal's powerful, purposeful conducting and a well-matched cast.
    8. Angola has long had a reputation as a hard place.
    9. Mrs. Johnson got to salvage what was left of her reputation in peace.
    10. The 124-year-old firm suffered a major blow to its reputation when it became embroiled in the Ivan Boesky insider trading scandal. Kidder agreed in 1987 to pay a then-record $25.3 million settle civil charges with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
    11. Other analysts say the company's aggressive reputation makes many foreign fund managers nervous.
    12. In the end, Unisource became an almost inevitable partner. A joint venture between the national operators of Sweden, Switzerland and the Netherlands, Unisource has direct contact with most of Europe's multinationals and was developing a solid reputation.
    13. In at least one way, Olympia & York has been a victim of its own reputation for astuteness.
    14. But four colleagues said Mr. Mayer felt that Salomon's problems could sully his own reputation.
    15. The investment bank has advised the government on several privatisation issues. Since joining Banque Indosuez in 1979, Mr Jeancourt-Galignani has established a reputation as a respected financier.
    16. A person who actually believes in something is likely to have his or her reputation and career destroyed by letting substance get in the way of image.
    17. That moral support was very important." Anderson, who plays on the current tour, has produced all of Yoakam's albums and is gaining a reputation as a producer for other recording artists.
    18. Mrs. Makim, the 33-year-old sister of the former Sarah Ferguson, now Britain's Duchess of York, said, "My reputation has been totally vindicated."
    19. He scheduled another hearing for Wednesday when, the judge said, "We'll let it all hang out." Moody's attorneys argued that the intense publicity over the bombs probe has hurt Moody's reputation.
    20. Ignatenko has a reputation for accessibility and clarity.
    21. Although disclosures of fraud and corruption in the Food and Drug Administration's generic drug division have tainted the agency's reputation and cast doubts about the industry, many say concerns about the safety of generic drugs are overblown.
    22. I want to be fair to myself, my family, my reputation, and I want to be fair to this institution that I've served for 34 years," the Texas Democrat told reporters.
    23. "Gardner has a national reputation now for being a very aggressive consumer advocate, and he's got the go-ahead from the attorney general," said a spokesman for Mr. Morales.
    24. Even so F&C seems to be living up to its pioneering reputation.
    25. Mrs. Lombardi, who died in 1982, told the detective she was disturbed by the service area's reputation and threatened to have Lombardi's name and football memorabilia removed, the state police spokesman said.
    26. He has a reputation for having all the bars in Kabul bombed because Islam forbids the consumption of alcohol.
    27. Justice goofed, but a near-frantic woman found a judge who was sensitive to her holiday plight, despite his tough reputation.
    28. As a minister in the state government of Baden-Wurttemberg, where he was responsible for law and order, he enjoyed the reputation of a strict conservative.
    29. As soon as she arrived in Tangier in 1947, Jane, whose novel, Two Serious Ladies (1943) had given her a reputation as writer to rival her husband's, fell in love with an illiterate young Moroccan woman she discovered in the grain market.
    30. The suit's accusations against the unions include charges they conducted a public "smearing" of the carrier's reputation, staged illegal work slowdowns and tried to undermine worker loyalty, Eastern said in a press statement.
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