例句 |
trespassnoun a breaking of a moral or legal codeforgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us breach, crime, debt, error, lawbreaking, malefaction, misdeed, misdoing, offense(or offence), sin, transgression, violation, wrongdoing bias crime, hate crimefelony, misconduct, misdemeanor, misfeasancefault, foible, peccadillobreak, infringementimmorality, iniquitousness, iniquity, sinfulness, vice, wickednesscorruption, debauchery, depravity, licentiousnessabuse, criminality, illegality, lawlessness, unlawfulnessdescent, downfall, fall noncrime blamelessness, faultlessness, guiltlessness, impeccability, innocence, irreproachabilitygoodness, morality, righteousness, virtue, virtuousness a failure to uphold the requirements of law, duty, or obligationplagiarism is a serious trespass of academic integrity breach, contravention, infraction, infringement, transgression, violation misconduct, misdemeanor, misfeasance, misprision, offense(or offence), sin, wrongdisregard, forgetting, ignoring, nonobservance, overlookingdelinquency, dereliction, neglectencroachment, intrusion, invasion noninfringement, observance respecting, upholding trespassverbto commit an offenseI consider him to be trespassing against all of us when he trespasses against any one of us err, fall, offend, sin, stray, transgress, wander breach, break, infringe, violatebackslide, lapsemess up break the law, fall from grace forgive, justify, pardonregret, repent, rue v.trespass, encroach, infringe, invade mean to make inroads upon the property, territory, or rights of another.trespass implies an unwarranted or unlawful intrusion.hunters trespassing on farmland encroach suggests gradual or stealthy entrance upon another's territory or usurpation of another's rights or possessions.the encroaching settlers displacing the native peoples infringe implies an encroachment clearly violating a right or prerogative.infringing a copyright invade implies a hostile and injurious entry into the territory or sphere of another.accused of invading their privacy in the 13th century |