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defile

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defile

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English 5++朗文当代英语 5++LDOCE 5++朗文 5++de·file1 /dɪˈfaɪl/ verb [transitive] formal  BAD BEHAVIOUR OR ACTIONSto make something less pure and good, especially by showing no respect 污损,污染,亵渎 Hallam’s tomb had been defiled and looted. 哈勒姆的坟墓遭到了亵渎和洗劫。→ See Verb table
Examples from the Corpus
defileTombstones in a Jewish cemetery had been defiled.Abusive behavior starts in the heart of one person, but eventually the whole system is defiled.Chinatown child, you're a Chinatown child, cursed by the temple your father defiled.They had been defiled, and I expected punishment.Hindus attach great importance to food, and her presence where it was prepared defiled everything the community ate.Exodus also prescribes death for those who defile the Sabbath or perform any work on that day.
de·file2 /dɪˈfaɪl, ˈdiːfaɪl/ noun [countable] formal  TTRa narrow passage, especially through mountains (山间)小径
Examples from the Corpus
defileThis is a lovely climb in itself, up what quite soon turns from a valley into a defile.Soon we were alone, moving through a narrow defile between two teetering antique shops.The narrow defile which had once been bridged by the Romans was now dammed to create a vast reservoir upstream.The outward journey was quite uneventful as far as the Wadi Tamit, a steep defile leading down the escarpment on to the coastal plain.The defile itself continues but you, unless you are hardy and ambitious, do not.The mountains rise abruptly from the wedged defiles, separating the hollows where the dwellings are clustered.
Origin defile (1300-1400) defoul to crush with the feet, make dirty ((13-17 centuries)), from Old French defouler, from fouler to step on
by make to especially less something pure Corpus good, and


defile
I
defile1 /dɪˈfaɪl/ verb [transitive] formal
 Date: 1300-1400
 Origin: defoul 'to crush with the feet, make dirty' (13-17 centuries), from Old French defouler, from fouler 'to step on'
to make something less pure and good, especially by showing no respect:
    Hallam’s tomb had been defiled and looted.

II
defile2 /dɪˈfaɪl, ˈdiːfaɪl/ noun [countable] formal
a narrow passage, especially through mountains


de·file1BrE /dɪˈfaɪl/ 🔊NAmE /dɪˈfaɪl/ 🔊 verbpresent simple - I / you / we / they defile BrE /dɪˈfaɪl/ 🔊 NAmE /dɪˈfaɪl/ 🔊present simple - he / she / it defiles BrE /dɪˈfaɪlz/ 🔊 NAmE /dɪˈfaɪlz/ 🔊past simple defiled BrE /dɪˈfaɪld/ 🔊 NAmE /dɪˈfaɪld/ 🔊past participle defiled BrE /dɪˈfaɪld/ 🔊 NAmE /dɪˈfaɪld/ 🔊 -ing form defiling BrE /dɪˈfaɪlɪŋ/ 🔊 NAmE /dɪˈfaɪlɪŋ/ 🔊~ sth (formal or literary) to make sth dirty or no longer pure, especially sth that people consider important or holy 弄脏;玷污;糟蹋;亵渎Many victims of burglary feel their homes have been defiled. 许多家门被撬的人都感到自己的家被玷污了。🔊🔊The altar had been defiled by vandals. 圣坛受到破坏公物者的肆意践踏。🔊🔊 de·file·ment BrE /dɪˈfaɪlmənt/ 🔊NAmE /dɪˈfaɪlmənt/ 🔊 noun [uncountable, countable]
de·file2BrE /dɪˈfaɪl/ 🔊NAmE /dɪˈfaɪl/ 🔊BrE /ˈdiːfaɪl/ 🔊NAmE /ˈdiːfaɪl/ 🔊 noun (formal) a narrow way through mountains 山中狭径