sin
- IPA[sɪn]
英式
- an immoral act considered to be a transgression against divine law;an act regarded as a serious or regrettable fault, offence, or omission
- commit a sin;offend against (God, a person, or a principle)
verb: sin, 3rd person present: sins, gerund or present participle: sinning, past tense: sinned, past participle: sinned
noun: sin, plural noun: sins
- 釋義
- 相關詞
- 片語
名詞
- 1. an immoral act considered to be a transgression against divine law a sin in the eyes of God the human capacity for sin 同義詞 反義詞
- ▪ an act regarded as a serious or regrettable fault, offence, or omission he committed the unforgivable sin of refusing to give interviews 同義詞
動詞
- 1. commit a sin I sinned and brought shame down on us
- ▪ offend against (God, a person, or a principle) Lord, we have sinned against you
- (in sport) a box or bench to which offending players can be sent for a period as a penalty ... his cross-check earned him two minutes in the sin bin
- send (a player) to a sin bin as a penalty: he was sin-binned for a professional foul
Oxford Dictionary
- (in Christian tradition) any of the seven deadly sins.
Oxford Dictionary
- (in Christian tradition) any of the seven deadly sins.
Oxford American Dictionary
- the tendency to evil supposedly innate in all human beings, held to be inherited from Adam in ...
Oxford Dictionary
- (in Roman Catholicism) a relatively slight sin that that does not entail damnation of the soul: she lost her patience, a venial sin she must report later to Father Damien
Oxford American Dictionary
- (in traditional or ancient Judaism) an offering made as an atonement for sin.
Oxford Dictionary
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- IPA[sin]
美式
- an immoral act considered to be a transgression against divine law: a sin in the eyes of God the human capacity for sin
- commit a sin: I sinned and brought shame down on us
Oxford American Dictionary
- IPA[sīn]
美式
- sine.
Oxford American Dictionary
- IPA[sʌɪn]
英式
- sine.
Oxford Dictionary