Reproche in english
Reproach
pronunciation: riproʊtʃ part of speech: noun, verb
pronunciation: riproʊtʃ part of speech: noun, verb
In gestures
reprochar = remonstrate ; berate ; fault ; lambast [lambaste] ; damn ; recreminate ; reprove ; reproach ; take + pot shots at ; cast + reflections on ; asperse.
Example: 'I'd love to be able to get them off my back', he remonstrated with a deep sigh.Example: Unfortunately, many of the writers are simply berating the current situation, holding to rather ancient models of mass culture.Example: What I would really like to fault her on is not her views on the role of the federal government but on her simplistic view of the online catalog.Example: Correctly, the author finds that the realities of antebellum reform are too complex either to laud the reformers' benevolence or to lambast them as fanatics = Correctly, the author finds that the realities of antebellum reform are too complex either to laud the reformers' benevolence or to lambast them as fanatics.Example: The play is damned by the critics but packs in the crowds and the producers may be upset by the adverse criticisms but they can, as the saying goes, cry all the way to the bank.Example: Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote: 'Experience informs us that the first defense of weak minds is to recriminate'.Example: The person reproving his friend must understand that before he can reprove someone else, he must first reprove himself.Example: The Governor, it is learnt, sternly reproached the party for putting the public to inconvenience for the last two days.Example: The film also takes pot shots at the media and the political system in the country.Example: Those who flaunt their affluence cast reflections on all who live prudently.Example: They see themselves unjustly aspersed, and vindicate themselves in terms no less opprobrious than those by which they are attacked.reproche = reproach ; reproof ; recrimination ; reproval ; reflection.
Example: A standing reproach to all librarians is the non-user.Example: Reproof should have a debilitating effect upon performance while praise should result in a somewhat higher increase in performance.Example: There are four prominent common law defenses to a divorce suit: condonation, recrimination, collusion, and connivance.Example: He received a two-year suspension for violating the conditions of a public reproval and being convicted of two drunk driving.Example: She added that she never heard 'a reflection on her part in perpetuating white supremacist violence'.more:
» con reproche = reprovingly ; reproachfully .
Example: I have actually started to avoid the computer which seems to look at me reprovingly every time I pass by. Example: He looked at her reproachfully for a moment, and then announced that he was ready to throw up the sponge.