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heinous    音标拼音: [h'enəs]
a. 可憎的,极恶的

可憎的,极恶的

heinous
adj 1: extremely wicked, deeply criminal; "a flagitious crime";
"heinous accusations" [synonym: {flagitious}, {heinous}]

Heinous \Hei"nous\ (h[=a]"n[u^]s), a. [OF. ha["i]nos hateful, F.
haineux, fr. OF. ha["i]ne hate, F. haine, fr. ha["i]r to
hate; of German origin. See {Hate}.]
Hateful; hatefully bad; flagrant; odious; atrocious; giving
great offense; -- applied to deeds or to character.
[1913 Webster]

It were most heinous and accursed sacrilege. --Hooker.
[1913 Webster]

How heinous had the fact been, how deserving
Contempt! --Milton.

Syn: Monstrous; flagrant; flagitious; atrocious. --
{Hei"nous*ly}, adv. -- {Hei"nous*ness}, n.
[1913 Webster]

140 Moby Thesaurus words for "heinous":
abhorrent, abject, abominable, arrant, atrocious, awful, bad, base,
beastly, beggarly, below contempt, beneath contempt, black,
blamable, blameworthy, brutal, cheesy, contemptible, criminal,
crude, crummy, crying, damnable, dark, debased, degraded,
deplorable, depraved, desperate, despicable, detestable, dire,
dirty, disgraceful, disgusting, dreadful, egregious, enormous,
evil, execrable, fetid, filthy, flagitious, flagrant, forbidding,
foul, fulsome, grave, grievous, gross, hateful, horrible, horrid,
ignoble, improper, infamous, iniquitous, knavish, lamentable,
little, loathsome, lousy, low, low-down, lumpen, malodorous, mangy,
mean, measly, mephitic, miasmal, miasmic, miserable, monstrous,
nasty, naughty, nauseating, nefarious, noisome, notorious, noxious,
objectionable, obnoxious, obscene, odious, offensive, outrageous,
paltry, peccant, petty, pitiable, pitiful, poky, poor, rank,
rebarbative, regrettable, repellent, reprehensible, reprobate,
reptilian, repugnant, repulsive, revolting, rotten, sad, scabby,
scandalous, schlock, scrubby, scruffy, scummy, scurvy, shabby,
shameful, shocking, shoddy, sickening, sinful, small, sordid,
squalid, stinking, terrible, too bad, unclean, unforgivable,
unmentionable, unpardonable, unspeakable, unworthy, vicious, vile,
villainous, wicked, woeful, worst, worthless, wretched, wrong


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  • Is this the correct pronunciation of heinous in any English-speaking . . .
    This past week, while speaking about the tragedy in Tucson, numerous Americans have used the word “heinous” [pronounced HAY-nus] to describe Jared Loughner’s crime No surprise there What has amazed me is the number of prominent and well-educated people who have mispronounced that word, including University of Arizona President Robert
  • slang - A whole nother way of looking at things - English Language . . .
    Agreed with Kris Tmesis is the act of deliberately separating a compound word at word boundaries, using them as separate constituents of a clause That is not quite what happens in ‘a whole nother’ First off, ‘another’ is, despite its orthographic shape, still easily recognisable as determiner + adjective, so splitting it up as such is more a matter of orthography than tmesis
  • single word requests - Formal alternative to bullsh-t - English . . .
    What is a reasonable formal alternative to 'bullshit'? For example: Bob isn't making a very good argument In fact everything he says is bullshit What can 'bullshit' be replaced with that is a
  • Is there a sentence that begins with “them”?
    An online retail store is asking its customers to construct a sentence beginning with them in order to win a voucher I just can't believe there's any such sentence, at least I don't know of any!
  • A non-racist alternative to Barbarian [closed]
    For example, you could use ‘heinous’ which means ‘unconscionably wicked’ (without ascribing that to any particular race) Barbaric captures the feeling of: primitive, cruelly unthinking, survival based, acting without thought of consequences to the other
  • Use of the term Cowardly Act in regards to violence
    There are words which are like bravery but which express some degree of the speaker's disagreement with the morals, ideology or manners of the subject, words such as: impudence, gall, nerve, audacity, brazenness, insolence or effrontery Sometimes heinous perpetrators have such qualities, and sometimes they are cowards
  • Is despatch the British spelling for dispatch or is it an archaic . . .
    Bold words from the same guy who, in the same dictionary, argued that systematize (the actual word in use) should be rendered as systemize for consistency with legalize, modernize, and civilize, and insisted that the "true spelling" of tongue is tung, of heinous is hainous, and of opaque is opake The turn against 'despatch' in Britain
  • Is it idiomatic to talk about murdering a dog?
    The former involved concealment, or slaying a man by night or when asleep, and was a heinous crime The latter was not a disgrace, if the killer acknowledged his deed, but he was subject to vengeance or demand for compensation
  • Where did the phrase youre welcome come from?
    The first references to welcome are found in Beowolf By 1300, “welcome” was being used more loosely to describe something acceptable, pleasurable, freely permitted, or cordially invited From Othello: (circa 1603): Lodovico: Madam, good night; I humbly thank your ladyship Desdemona: Your honour is most welcome From the linked source: A reader found an earlier citation in The House by
  • Why do British people pronounce “Ibiza” as “Ibitha”?
    Even on the BBC World Service, which is produced for foreign consumption, you will regularly hear heinous offenses committed against the Spanish, French, Italian, German, and Russian languages (Probably most others, too, but those are the only ones where I can tell the difference ) Ibiza is a singular exception





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