Definition of 'ashamed'
1. adjective [v-link ADJ]
If someone is ashamed, they feel embarrassed or guilty because of something they do or they have done,
or because of their appearance.
2. adjective [v-link ADJ of n]
COBUILD Advanced English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Video: pronunciation of
ashamed
Word Frequency
ashamed in American English
adjective
SYNONYMY NOTE:
ashamed implies embarrassment, and sometimes guilt, felt because of one's own or another's
wrong or foolish behavior [ashamed of his tears];
humiliate implies a sense of being humbled or disgraced [humiliated by my failure];
mortify suggests humiliation so great as to seem almost fatal to one's pride or self-esteem
[she was mortified by his obscenities];
chagrin verb transitive suggests embarrassment coupled usually with regret over what might have been prevented
[chagrined at his error]2.
feeling
humiliated or embarrassed, as from a
sense of inadequacy or inferiority
3.
reluctant because fearing shame
beforehand
OPPOSITE: proud
Webster’s New World College Dictionary, 4th Edition. Copyright © 2010 by
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. All rights reserved.
Word Frequency
ashamed in American English
(əˈʃeimd)
adjective
1.
feeling shame;
distressed or embarrassed by feelings of guilt, foolishness, or
disgrace
He felt ashamed for having spoken so cruelly
2.
They were ashamed to show their work
Most material © 2005, 1997, 1991 by Penguin Random House LLC. Modified entries © 2019
by Penguin Random House LLC and HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
Derived forms
ashamedly (əˈʃeimɪdli) adverb
ashamedness
noun
Word origin
[bef. 1000; orig. ptp. of earlier ashame (v.) to be ashamed, ME, OE āscamian, equiv. to ā- a-3 + scamian to shame]Word Frequency
ashamed in British English
adjective (usually postpositive)
2. (foll by of)
Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers
Word origin
Old English āscamod, past participle of āscamian to shame, from scamu shameExamples of 'ashamed' in a sentence
ashamed
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ashamed
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In other languages
ashamed
British English: ashamed
/əˈʃeɪmd/ ADJECTIVE
If someone is ashamed of something or someone, they feel embarrassed about it or guilty because of it.
I felt incredibly ashamed of myself for getting so angry.
- American English: ashamed
- Arabic: خَجْلان
- Brazilian Portuguese: envergonhado
- Chinese: 羞愧的
- Croatian: posramljen
- Czech: zahanbený
- Danish: skamfuld
- Dutch: beschaamd
- European Spanish: avergonzado reprensible
- Finnish: häpeissään
- French: honteux
- German: schamerfüllt
- Greek: ντροπιασμένος
- Italian: vergognarsi
- Japanese: 恥じて
- Korean: 부끄러워 하는
- Norwegian: skamfull
- Polish: zawstydzony
- European Portuguese: envergonhado
- Romanian: rușinat
- Russian: пристыженный
- Spanish: avergonzado
- Swedish: skamsen
- Thai: อับอาย
- Turkish: mahcup
- Ukrainian: присоромлений
- Vietnamese: xấu hổ
Nearby words of
ashamed
Related terms of
ashamed
Source
Definition of ashamed from the
Collins English Dictionary
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