reproach

நிந்தையும்
definition
verb
critics of the administration reproached the president for his failure to tackle the deficiency
address (someone) in such a way as to express disapproval or disappointment.
noun
he gave her a look of reproach
the expression of disapproval or disappointment.
translation of 'reproach'
கடிந்துகொள்,
நிந்தி
example
his elegance is a living 'reproach' to our slovenly habits
No less absurd is the second 'reproach' thrown upon capitalism - namely, that technological and therapeutical innovations do not benefit all people.
he gave her a look of 'reproach'
Although rock had become mainstream by the early 1970s, it continued to arouse resistance and to elicit 'reproach' - and continues, indeed, to this day.
He tells him that he is not there to 'reproach' him, and John denies having done anything wrong.
Your comments bring to mind John Milton's words: ‘They who have put out the people's eyes, 'reproach' them of their blindness.’
The poem's thought about the aetiology of war, its main theme, is based on Christ's 'reproach' of the Pharisees, who had upbraided the disciples for not washing their hands before eating.
Some of his published works have met with strong criticism and 'reproach' .
Perhaps the most horrible aspect of Frank's world is not the existence of cruelty, but rather the possibility that life might be shaped by nothing more than the whims of others beyond control or 'reproach' .
The hint of 'reproach' in ‘omission’ may not be quite fair to either of us.
She agrees, goes to his home, and realizes that he will not question or 'reproach' her.
The 'reproach' was lightly mocking and they both laughed.
For Billy the boy is a nagging reminder of his own delinquent youth: for Shirley-Diane he is a strange mix of sex object and living 'reproach' .
The characters often look up to the gods for guidance, speak of them and 'reproach' them for putting such a predicament onto mortals of flesh and blood.
his elegance is a living 'reproach' to our slovenly habits
Aunt Alice frowned slightly at this reproach against her motherly duties, but the sorrow in her beautiful eyes could not be from this 'reproach' alone, it was too deep.
he gave her a look of 'reproach'
Stung by his 'reproach' , she counters by reminding him that her lack of ardor is understandable given their night of lovemaking.
I could scarcely 'reproach' you for having undergone it without success, for those who emerge from it triumphant are very few.
Medicine can no longer 'reproach me with' being unfaithful: I've paid a proper tribute to erudition, and to what old writers call pedantry.
Picasso's critics 'reproached' him for an inability‘to forge a personal style’.
Dolly 'reproaches' him gently when an embarrassed Silas has to ask her what that means.
He eyed Mr. Jacks with disgust, like a mother 'reproaching' her child for muddying the kitchen floor.
Emilia, still 'reproaching' Othello with Desdemona's innocence, dies.
They talked for two hours, during which Baeck 'reproached him with' all the accusations that he had heard against him.
They cite the demands, 'reproaches' and scaremongering of an obsessed media.
Charges of brutality, of savagery, have been laid at Simon's door, but perhaps this is the first time posterity has 'reproached' him for ordinary honesty.
Whenever someone 'reproaches me with' not having used an ordinary court for their sentencing, I can only say: In this hour I am responsible for the fate of the German nation and hence the supreme law lord of the German people.
All those 'reproaches' aimed at us should have been directed against them, because their cinema was completely unreal.
Idomeneus turns his sword against himself, without heeding the advice of a priest who 'reproaches' him for his cruelty and invites him to make a substitute sacrifice of ‘a hundred bulls whiter than snow.’
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