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1.treat, mention, or speak to rudely"He insulted her with his rude remarks" "the student who had betrayed his classmate was dissed by everyone"
2.cause to feel resentment or indignation"Her tactless remark offended me"
3.hurt the feelings of"She hurt me when she did not include me among her guests" "This remark really bruised my ego"
4.strike with disgust or revulsion"The scandalous behavior of this married woman shocked her friends"
5.act in disregard of laws, rules, contracts, or promises"offend all laws of humanity" "violate the basic laws or human civilization" "break a law" "break a promise"
1.the action of attacking an enemy
↘ abusive, bitchy, grievous, hit, hurt, hurtful, insulting, nasty, offender, offensive, opprobrious, scornful, scurrilous, spiteful, vicious, wounding
abominate, affront, aggrieve, anger, annoy, antagonise, antagonize, appal, appall, breach, break, bruise, chafe, displease, diss, go against, horrify, hurt, hurt s.o.'s feelings, incur displeasure, infract, infringe, injure, insult, irritate, mortify, nettle, outrage, pique, provoke, put out, scandalize, shock, siege, slur, snub, spite, stumble, transgress, upset, vex, violate, wound, scandalise (British)
phase d'une lutte (fr)[Classe]
opération militaire (fr)[Classe]
military[Domaine]
MilitaryProcess[Domaine]
action, activity, busyness, employment, occupation, pursuit - action, military action[Hyper.]
maneuver, manoeuver, manoeuvre, operate[Dérivé]
armed forces, armed services, force, forces, military, military machine, services, war machine[Domaine]
phase du combat (fr)[Classe]
offend (n.)
rendre vil, indigne de respect (fr)[Classe]
rendre humble (fr)[Classe]
offenser qqn (fr)[Classe]
humiliation (fr)[Classe]
parole insultante (fr)[Classe]
humilier (fr)[Thème]
offense (fr)[Thème]
(act of revenge; retaliatory action; reprisal; retaliation; vengeance)[Thème]
arouse, elicit, enkindle, evoke, fire, kindle, provoke, raise, vellicate - discourtesy, disrespect[Hyper.]
blessure (fr)[GenV+comp]
discourtesy, impoliteness, incivility, offence, offense, offensive activity - bitchiness, cattiness, nastiness, spite, spitefulness - malice, maliciousness, spite, spitefulness, venom - dysphemistic, offensive - offensive - affront, diss, hurt s.o.'s feelings, insult, offend - abuse, blackguard, clapperclaw, scold, scold at, shout - rail, revile, vilify, vituperate - contumelious[Dérivé]
humilier (fr)[Classe]
offenser qqn (fr)[Classe]
offense (fr)[termes liés]
(act of revenge; retaliatory action; reprisal; retaliation; vengeance)[termes liés]
aggrieve, bruise, hurt, injure, offend, spite, wound[Hyper.]
affront, insult, snub - abuse, contumely, revilement, vilification[Dérivé]
offend (v. tr.)
anger; ire[Classe]
offense (fr)[Classe]
arouse, elicit, enkindle, evoke, fire, kindle, provoke, raise, vellicate - annoyance, chafe, vexation - detest, dislike, hate, loathe[Hyper.]
anger, ira, ire, wrath - anger, choler, ire - anger, angriness - offend, pique - incensed, indignant, outraged, umbrageous - chasten, moderate, temper - annoy, bother, bug, chafe, devil, disturb, get at, get to, gravel, intrude, irritate, nark, nettle, rag, rile, rub up the wrong way, trouble, vex, worry - aggrieve, bruise, hurt, injure, offend, spite, wound - distastefulness, odiousness, offensiveness - dysphemism - objectionably, obnoxiously, offensively - bitterness, feud, gall, grudge, rancor, rancour, resentment[Dérivé]
froisser (fr)[Nominalisation]
anger, see red[Cause]
euphemistic, inoffensive - harmless, innocent, innocuous, inoffensive, safe, unoffending[Ant.]
anger[Hyper.]
offence, offense, umbrage - irritation, pique, temper - dysphemistic, offensive - repoussant (fr)[Dérivé]
resent[Cause]
offend (v. tr.)
offense (fr)[Classe]
grossièreté (fr)[Classe]
tendance, disposition à être ou à devenir (fr)[Classe...]
offense (fr)[Thème]
impoli (fr)[termes liés]
create, do, make, run up - actions, behavior, behaviour, comportment, conduct, demeanor, demeanour, doings - malevolence, malevolency, malice - malevolence, malevolent, malignity[Hyper.]
arousal, rousing - elicitation, evocation, induction - incitation, incitement, provocation - provocative - evocative, redolent, remindful, reminiscent, resonant, suggestive - aggrieve, bruise, hurt, injure, offend, spite, wound - despiteful, spiteful, vindictive - bitchy, cattish, catty, grievous, hurtful, nasty, spiteful, vicious, wounding - cruddy, dirty, filthy, foul, nasty, smutty - awful, nasty - malicious - poisonous, venomous, vicious - offend, pique - distastefulness, odiousness, offensiveness - dysphemism - objectionably, obnoxiously, offensively[Dérivé]
ill-mannered, impolite, mannerless, rude, uncivil[Propriété~]
euphemistic, inoffensive - harmless, innocent, innocuous, inoffensive, safe, unoffending[Ant.]
offenser qqn (fr)[Classe]
blessure (fr)[GenV+comp]
arouse, elicit, enkindle, evoke, fire, kindle, provoke, raise, vellicate[Hyper.]
discourtesy, impoliteness, incivility, offence, offense, offensive activity - bitchiness, cattiness, nastiness, spite, spitefulness - malice, maliciousness, venom - dysphemistic, offensive - repoussant (fr)[Dérivé]
offend (v. tr.)
amazement; astonishment; surprise; wonder; wonderment; admiration[Classe]
frayeur (grande peur) (fr)[Classe]
anger; ire[Classe]
(outrage; scandal), (shock; offend; scandalize; scandalise; appal; appall; outrage)[Thème]
(censure; deprecation; disapprobation; disapproval)[Caract.]
racine ILC (fr)[Domaine]
racine SUMO (fr)[Domaine]
factotum[Domaine]
EmotionalState[Domaine]
SubjectiveAssessmentAttribute[Domaine]
repel, repulse - affront, insult, snub - comment, gossip, scuttlebutt - trouble - stupefaction - anger, choler, ire - bad person[Hyper.]
disgust, dread, horror, revulsion - nausea - appal, appall, offend, outrage, scandalise, scandalize, shock - disgraceful, scandalous, shameful, shocking - hideous, horrid, horrific, outrageous - shock, traumatise, traumatize - shock - baffle, bedaze, bemuse, bewilder, daze, dazzle, stun, stupefy - offensively - breach, break, go against, infract, offend, transgress, violate - disgustingness, unsavoriness - distastefulness, odiousness, offensiveness[Dérivé]
indigner (fr)[Nominalisation]
unwholesome[Similaire]
inoffensive - savory, savoury[Ant.]
shock; offend; scandalize; scandalise; appal; appall; outrage[ClasseHyper.]
factotum[Domaine]
SubjectiveAssessmentAttribute[Domaine]
churn up, disgust, nauseate, revolt, sicken[Hyper.]
outrage, scandalisation, scandalization - dirt, malicious gossip, scandal - aféra, ostuda, skandál (cs) - daze, shock, stupor - indignation - shocker - insulting, offensive - unsavory, unsavoury - loathsome, nauseating, nauseous, noisome, queasy, sickening, vile[Dérivé]
offend (v. tr.)
acte puni par la loi (fr)[ClasseParExt.]
état juridique (fr)[ClasseParExt.]
écart de conduite (fr)[Classe]
disobedience; noncompliance; insubordination[Classe]
criminal; felon; crook; outlaw; malefactor; crime[Classe]
personne défavorable, en désaccord avec (fr)[Classe]
personne qui détruit (fr)[Classe]
delinquent[Classe]
droit pénal (fr)[termes liés]
law[Domaine]
CriminalAction[Domaine]
Human[Domaine]
NormativeAttribute[Domaine]
factotum[Domaine]
realization[Domaine]
relate - failure - actus reus, misconduct, misdeed, wrongdoing, wrongful conduct - crime, criminal offence, criminal offense, foul play, law-breaking, offence, offense - bad person - evildoer, offender, wrongdoer - crime, criminal, crook, felon, malefactor, outlaw - breach, desecration, evildoing, transgression, violation[Hyper.]
contempt, disrespect - disrespect, floccinaucinihilipilification - discourtesy, disrespect - breach, break, go against, infract, offend, transgress, violate - commit a sin, sin, transgress, trespass - conflict, contravene, infringe, run afoul - accuse, criminate, impeach, incriminate - criminalise, criminalize, illegalise, illegalize, outlaw - imply, incriminate, inculpate - criminal, felonious - appal, appall, offend, outrage, scandalise, scandalize, shock - disgustingness, unsavoriness - distastefulness, odiousness, offensiveness - break, go against, violate - compliance, fulfillment, fulfilment, honoring, observance - keeping[Dérivé]
desecrate, violate - infringe[Nominalisation]
infringe, offend against, violate[PersonneQui~]
criminal law[Domaine]
offending[Similaire]
abide by, honor, honour, observe, respect - savory, savoury - inviolable[Ant.]
disrespect[Hyper.]
breach - desecration, evildoing, transgression, violation - breach of the law, contravention, infraction, infraction of the law, infringement, infringement of the law, invasion, lapse, misdemeanor, misdemeanour, offence, offense, penal offence, transgression of the law, trespass against the law, violation of the law - evildoer, offender, wrongdoer - transgressor - lawbreaker, law offender, violator - crime, criminal offence, criminal offense, foul play, law-breaking - offensive, unsavory, unsavoury - violative - violable[Dérivé]
keep, observe[Ant.]
offend (v. tr.)
OffendOf*fend (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p. Offended; p. pr. & vb. n. Offending.] [OF. offendre, L. offendere, offensum; ob (see Ob-) + fendere (in comp.) to thrust, dash. See Defend.]
1. To strike against; to attack; to assail. [Obs.] Sir P. Sidney.
2. To displease; to make angry; to affront.
A brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city. Prov. xviii. 19.
3. To be offensive to; to harm; to pain; to annoy; as, strong light offends the eye; to offend the conscience.
4. To transgress; to violate; to sin against. [Obs.]
Marry, sir, he hath offended the law. Shak.
5. (Script.) To oppose or obstruct in duty; to cause to stumble; to cause to sin or to fall. [Obs.]
Who hath you misboden or offended. Chaucer.
If thy right eye offend thee, pluck it out . . . And if thy right hand offend thee, cut it off. Matt. v. 29, 3O.
Great peace have they which love thy law, and nothing shall offend them. Ps. cxix. 165.
OffendOf*fend", v. i.
1. To transgress the moral or divine law; to commit a crime; to stumble; to sin.
Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all. James ii. 10.
If it be a sin to covet honor,
I am the most offending soul alive. Shak.
2. To cause dislike, anger, or vexation; to displease.
I shall offend, either to detain or give it. Shak.
To offend against, to do an injury or wrong to; to commit an offense against. “We have offended against the Lord already.” 2 Chron. xxviii. 13.
Toutes les traductions de offend
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