reputations in English

noun
1
the beliefs or opinions that are generally held about someone or something.
his reputation was tarnished by allegations that he had taken bribes

Use "reputations" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "reputations" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "reputations", or refer to the context using the word "reputations" in the English Dictionary.

1. Reputations are volatile.

2. your reputations, as employees, are at stake.

3. (Laughter) Reputations are volatile.

4. Malicious gossipers lyingly ruin the reputations of others.

5. They have enviable reputations as athletes.

6. They took a risk, gambled with their reputations.

7. Any further recalls will sully their reputations, perhaps irreparably.

8. Actors' reputations have been made and unmade on this London stage.

9. LPS Corals have aggressive reputations, courtesy of their sweeper tentacles

10. A number of athletes have gained reputations for this uncanny ability.

11. Even their reputations have been hurt as they meet with humiliating failure.

12. Faced with less certainty, Applicants may have emphasized school reputations and financial security.

13. If you're a beginner, steer clear of resorts with reputations for difficult skiing.

14. Use the noun Calumny to characterize verbal attacks that are meant to destroy reputations or friendships

15. The scandalous remarks in the newspaper besmirch the reputations of every member of the society.

16. 13 Duke Ellington and Count Basie also tarnished their reputations by recording brassy versions of Beatle tunes.

17. Some , like the diver Guo Jingjing, are already big-name solidified their reputations during these Games.

18. Schools with better reputations will be flooded with applications while poorer schools will be left high and dry.

19. It is they who give the rest of us a smudge on our reputations and impugn our character.

20. Key field support teams were said to be overtly impugning the reputations of colleagues within earshot of customers.

21. Both Sir John and the Harwell Lab had the highest reputations, and so the confident media were unequivocal.

22. Misfortune was surmounted, and misfortune became too great a burden; virtuous reputations were earned, and scandalous stories were recounted.

23. From the archive: Susan Sontag, Harold Bloom, and Steiner once Bestrode the public realm but their reputations have faded

24. Alleyways sometimes have reputations for being dark, dank and maybe even dangerous, but not all Alleys are like that

25. People will acquire reputations on how well-trained their computers are and how well-groomed their computational ecology is.

26. The reputations of others who may not have been so willing to be identified are sacrificed in the quest for titillation.

27. 24 Their ability to control and to recover control of a class is more tenuous,(www.Sentencedict.com) and their reputations are more vulnerable.

28. Mark Bloomer and Brant Dahlfors lead by example, having established reputations for perceptive market intelligence, trusted industry relationships, and personalized customer service

29. Beguilers have reputations as rakes, thieves, spies, and puppet masters, but they can also be diplomats, peacemakers, or heroic leaders who give hope in desperate situations

30. To hold otherwise would leave municipalities the helpless victims of all those who choose to publish untrue imputations which injure their reputations.

31. The Cancelers are equally vulnerable to storms of controversy and bad press that will destroy their reputations, and the best way to deter them is …

32. What we don't see clearly is that we do damage to our reputations and to our time management systems when we don't manage individual habits.

33. In China, where there are no laws protecting the media or freedom of speech, companies who don't like our reports can sue us for allegedly damaging their reputations.

34. 18 For the last three centuries many actors and actresses have established their reputations by taking Shakespearian parts; e. g. Garrick in the 18th century and Kean and Irving in the 19th.

35. Companies like Etude, Amati, Allora and countless others have built sterling reputations worldwide for their intermediate and professional Bb Clarinets, and you don't need to look any further than this section to find them.

36. Boomtowns such as Borger, Texas, and Kiefer, Oklahoma, earned reputations for violence, but most injuries and deaths were caused by dangerous jobs around large, moving equipment or explosions in the oil fields rather than from fighting in the streets or saloons.

37. 2008 May 30, Stephanie Clifford, “For Dunkin’, a Tempest in an Iced-Coffee Cup”, in New York Times‎[1]: “Often the Counterstory can become bigger than the original story,” said Adam Selig, the chief executive of Visible Technologies, which helps companies handle their reputations online

38. ‘At no stage did any of these worthies think it necessary to do some fact-checking before Besmirching the reputation of a former cabinet officer.’ ‘So in the end all you really are doing is Besmirching reputations.’ ‘In his death, they are surreptitiously Besmirching his reputation to gain political protection.’

39. 2008, Eddie Wainwright, Poetry in Our Time: The Poet, Publisher, Reader, and Reviewer: What on earth do they think they are doing, this legion of Barers of poets' souls: apart, of course, from making a few bob for, and enhancing the reputations of, their publishers and themselves?··comparative form of bare: more bare

40. Jack (French, Christ Church, Oxford) tells the story of Cenci (1577-99), a young Italian woman who was Brutalized by her father and resolved to murder him, but also discusses the strange lives of people who have fallen under her spell, particularly artists and writers whose fascination with her have cost them reputations and sometimes friends and relatives.