sully

listen to the pronunciation of sully
Englisch - Türkisch
gölge düşürmek
lekelemek
kirletmek

Ben senin iyi adını kirletmek istemem. - I wouldn't want to sully your good name.

biabır etmek
kirlet

Ben senin iyi adını kirletmek istemem. - I wouldn't want to sully your good name.

{f} kirletmek, lekelemek; gölge düşürmek: This carnival atmosphere sullies the charm of the town. Bu panayır havası şehrin o güzelim
lekele
(Ev ile ilgili) leke sürmek
alnına leke sürmek
sullied
lekelenmiş
sullied
lekeli
sullied
{f} lekele
sullied
lekele lekeli
sullying
kirleten
Englisch - Englisch
to damage or corrupt

He did not wish to sully his reputation with an ill-mannered comment.

to soil or stain; to dirty

He did not wish to sully his hands with gardening.

{n} a soil, a spot
{v} to soil, spot, tarnish
To become soiled or tarnished
Soil; tarnish; stain
If someone sullies something, they make it dirty. I felt loath to sully the gleaming brass knocker by handling it. to spoil or reduce the value of something that was perfect (Probably from soiller; SOIL)
If something is sullied by something else, it is damaged so that it is no longer pure or of such high value. The City's reputation has been sullied by scandals like those at Lloyd's She claimed they were sullying her good name
make dirty or spotty, as by exposure to air; also used metaphorically; "The silver was tarnished by the long exposure to the air"; "Her reputation was sullied after the affair with a married man"
United States painter (born in England) of portraits and historical scenes (1783-1872)
place under suspicion or cast doubt upon; "sully someone's reputation"
French statesman (1560-1641)
French statesman (1560-1641) United States painter (born in England) of portraits and historical scenes (1783-1872)
{f} dirty, soil, tarnish; taint, defile, disgrace
charge falsely or with malicious intent; attack the good name and reputation of someone; "The journalists have defamed me!" "The article in the paper sullied my reputation"
To soil; to dirty; to spot; to tarnish; to stain; to darken; used literally and figuratively; as, to sully a sword; to sully a person's reputation
Sully Prudhomme
orig. René-François-Armand Prudhomme born March 16, 1839, Paris, France died Sept. 7, 1907, Châtenay French poet. Inspired at first by an unhappy love affair, he published fluent and melancholic verse in volumes beginning with Stances et poèmes (1865), containing his well-known "Le Vase brise." He later adopted the more objective approach of the Parnassian poets and attempted to represent philosophical concepts in verse. Among his best-known later works are La Justice (1878) and Le Bonheur (1888). In 1901 he was awarded the first Nobel Prize for Literature, over such greatly admired figures as Leo Tolstoy
sullied
Simple past tense and past participle of sully
sullied
past of sully
sullied
defiled or tainted, soiled or stained
sullied
especially of reputation; "the senator's seriously damaged reputation"; "a flyblown reputation"; "a tarnished reputation"; "inherited a spotted name"
sullies
third-person singular of sully
sullying
present participle of sully
sully
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