different between shameful vs disreputable

shameful

English

Etymology

From Middle English schameful, schamfull, from Old English *s?eamfull, s?eomfull, equivalent to shame +? -ful. Cognate with Danish skamfuld (shameful, shamefast, ashamed).

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /??e?mf?l/

Adjective

shameful (comparative more shameful, superlative most shameful)

  1. Causing or meriting shame or disgrace; disgraceful
    • 2009 February 19, Gareth Lewis, Southern Daily Echo:
      "They have turned a great old English institution into a shameful clip-joint. It's a shuddering, howling tragedy."
  2. Giving offense.

Synonyms

  • See Thesaurus:despicable

Derived terms

  • shamefully
  • shamefulness

Translations

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disreputable

English

Etymology

dis- +? reputable

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /d?s???pj?t?b?l/

Adjective

disreputable (comparative more disreputable, superlative most disreputable)

  1. Not respectable, lacking repute; discreditable.

Translations

Noun

disreputable (plural disreputables)

  1. A person who is not reputable.

disreputable From the web:

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  • what does disreputable mean definition
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