English to Portuguese Dictionary condemn

condemn

condenar
definition
verb
fair-minded people declined to condemn her on mere suspicion
express complete disapproval of, typically in public; censure.
the rebels had been condemned to death
sentence (someone) to a particular punishment, especially death.
translation of 'condemn'
verb
sentenciar,
desapropriar,
censurar,
confiscar,
culpar,
reprovar,
condenar,
rejeitar
example
The demon that fell in love with me so many years ago, that helped 'condemn' me to this fate, was standing right here talking to me.
They can take a buyout package and get out of the way of the bulldozers, or wait for the city to 'condemn' their property and force them out.
Many people said it was wrong to 'condemn' future workers to worse pension arrangements.
She could not and would not 'condemn' him to her fate.
She should not be targeted by a group with an ideological agenda that may 'condemn' her or even force her into a decision that will have lasting repercussions.
Detectives were forced to put together a ‘magic circle’ of circumstantial evidence which would 'condemn' Stone.
fair-minded people declined to 'condemn' her on mere suspicion
A host of international covenants and national laws already 'condemn' and outlaw trafficking, and that is good.
But if they didn't have enough victims for a good day's fun, the Romans would conveniently 'condemn' even minor criminals to death and replenish the supply.
The killing of innocent civilians by suicide bombers must be roundly 'condemned' .
What violence there was has been roundly and rightly 'condemned' by everyone from Scotland's First Minister Jack McConnell to Geldof himself.
The basic requirement is the implementation of the report into the fire service, delivered by Sir George Bain last week and roundly 'condemned' by Gilchrist and the FBU.
He was proclaimed President of the Provisional Government of Poland at the time of the Polish revolt of 1830-31, for which he was 'condemned' to death but then escaped to Paris.
The scientific evidence 'condemns' the company:
Now the plan has been shelved but the clinic, which has to vacate its current premises after they were 'condemned' by health and safety inspectors, still needs to find a new home.
What Camus is saying is that man is 'condemned' by nature and circumstances to spiritual exile, always seeking an inner kingdom in which to be reborn.
Nothing works them into a 'condemnatory' lather more quickly.
Inevitably, he was 'condemned' to death, but was reprieved and spent his last years a prisoner on the Île d' Yeu.
The practice of psychiatry has at its core the one-toone encounter between doctor and patient, and to offer a diagnosis on lesser evidence 'condemns' psychiatry as a form of idle gossip.
The trip from the condemned cell to the gallows was very short and there was no speech to which the 'condemned' man had to listen whilst standing on the trap.
One book I did on the Welsh borders was thought to be a wrong move by many people so I feel 'condemned' more or less to deal with the matter and mythology of London even if it's expanding out to the fringes.
While such a voyage is plausible, the complete lack of evidence 'condemns' it to remain conjecture.
The teacher was 'condemned' to death along with the other two men, but was pardoned because of his youth and was sentenced to life imprisonment with hard labour instead.
But killing their fellow God-created human beings in order to attain their personal salvation is a blatantly selfish and the most 'condemnable' inhumane act, morally and theologically.
But during WW I, 3,082 officers and men were 'condemned' to death, although the majority of these sentences were commuted to terms of imprisonment.
Those continuing to compete only locally are in grave danger of 'condemning' themselves to long-term decline.
An investigation by a South Yorkshire environmental health team which revealed 'condemned' meat was being siphoned back into the food chain is to feature on TV.
It's all about a master criminal, a ‘remade’, a person 'condemned' by the state to mutilation.
And who can help but feel a great sympathy for those 'condemned' by circumstance to live in such accommodation without the means to do so?
‘Their faces were white and they were very 'condemnatory' of our lack of objectivity and fairness,’ Mr. Carter said.
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