释义 |
calumnycal‧um‧ny /ˈkæləmni/ noun (plural calumnies)  calumnyOrigin: 1400-1500 Old French calomnie, from Latin calumnia, from calvi ‘to deceive’ - He could brand this as a calumny.
- He was relaxed, a contrast to the tension which had gripped him while he spoke of the MacQuillan calumny.
- Murders, theft, rape, calumnies, graft - our daily bread.
1[countable] an untrue and unfair statement about someone that is intended to give people a bad opinion of them2[uncountable] when someone says things like this |