Desprestigio in english
Discredit
pronunciation: dɪskredət part of speech: verb, noun
pronunciation: dɪskredət part of speech: verb, noun
In gestures
dar prestigio = lend + authoritativeness.
Example: Section editors, who oversee quality, lend authoritativeness.desprestigiar = vilify ; smear ; revile ; debunk ; bring + Nombre + into disrepute ; defame.
Example: Robert Kent's sole agenda is to attack Cuba and vilify the Cuban library community while supporting the US government's interventionist destabilization policies.Example: As a result of this policy hundreds of priests have been been suspended from ministry and have had their names publicly smeared without proof or even credible evidence.Example: The pot calls the kettle black may be used when one scoundrel reviles another -- they are tarred with the same brush.Example: Process reengineering is in the debunking phase of its life cycle - an evolutionary pattern in which management ideas and techniques are first presented as panaceas for business success and subsequently debunked as worthless.Example: This article considers the danger that inherent bias in such research might bring library and information science research into disrepute.Example: A former Thai magazine editor has been sentenced to 11 years in jail for defaming the country's king.more:
» desprestigiarse = lose + face .
Example: Fear of 'losing face' often prevents people from seeking counseling for psychological problems until the problems are advanced.desprestigio = loss of face ; vilification.
Example: Males are primarily concerned with a loss of face when confronted with a jealousy situation, while females are concerned with the possible loss of a partner.Example: In my opinion, this initiative has developed de facto into a pitiless personal campaign of vilification against him.