reproach

ನಿಂದೆ
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 '
ತೆಗಳಿಕೆ,
ಛೀಮಾರಿ ಮಾಡು
example
he gave her a look of 'reproach'
I could scarcely 'reproach' you for having undergone it without success, for those who emerge from it triumphant are very few.
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.
Your comments bring to mind John Milton's words: ‘They who have put out the people's eyes, 'reproach' them of their blindness.’
Stung by his 'reproach' , she counters by reminding him that her lack of ardor is understandable given their night of lovemaking.
She agrees, goes to his home, and realizes that he will not question or 'reproach' her.
He tells him that he is not there to 'reproach' him, and John denies having done anything wrong.
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.
his elegance is a living 'reproach' to our slovenly habits
The hint of 'reproach' in ‘omission’ may not be quite fair to either of us.
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 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.
his elegance is a living 'reproach' to our slovenly habits
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' .
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.
Some of his published works have met with strong criticism and 'reproach' .
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.
Painfully, torturedly, he bit his lip to keep the stream of 'reproaches' and denials from bursting through the dam of his control.
There are other accounts by Welsh evangelists 'reproaching' Irish passengers for dancing too vigorously.
He is imprisoned for a year for having acted as Castlewood's second in the duel, for which Lady Castlewood bitterly 'reproaches' him, and on his release joins the army and fights in the war of the Spanish Succession.
The US proposal is that the UN bans all cloning which it describes as ‘unethical, morally 'reproachable' and contrary to due respect for the human person’.
When Holly 'reproaches' Harry with the damage he has caused to his ‘victims,’ Harry makes the first of his famous speeches.
If you ignore one of the small safety details when riding these machines, you could end up 'reproaching' yourself why did not you do it.
You have to be smarter, more tenacious, less 'reproachable' .
We cannot believe the government is moving to legalize the dog-eating practice of some Koreans, which is not only harmful to national interests but also disgraceful and 'reproachable' .
That does not mean that the French 'reproaches' against the British were all well founded.
In Chicago an ideologue 'reproached' Wright with the example of one Comrade Evans, whose head was bandaged.
Credits: Google Translate