transgressed in English

verb
1
infringe or go beyond the bounds of (a moral principle or other established standard of behavior).
she had transgressed an unwritten social law
synonyms:misbehavebehave badlybreak the lawerrfall from gracestray from the straight and narrowsindo wronggo astraytrespassinfringebreachcontravenedisobeydefyviolatebreakflout

Use "transgressed" in a sentence

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

1. You want to be transgressed.

2. 9 They had transgressed the bounds of decency.

3. His manners transgressed the bounds of good taste.

4. They have transgressed the treaty of peace.

5. They had transgressed the bounds of decency.

6. You mean after Michael pays for the vile he's transgressed upon me?

7. Your first forefather sinned, And your spokesmen have transgressed against Me.

8. But like Adam they have transgressed the covenant ; There they have dealt treacherously against Me.

9. But they like men have transgressed the covenant : there have they dealt treacherously against me.

10. Synonyms for Contravened include broke, brake, broken, violated, infringed, breached, defied, disobeyed, transgressed and contradicted

11. 18:19 —How is ‘a brother who is transgressed against more than a strong town’?

12. It signals us when we have transgressed codes of behavior that we personally want to sustain.

13. The sanctity of marriage should not be transgressed, and adulterers stand the risk of being stoned ... and viceversa.

14. "Identities, Affiliations and Allegiances ignite passions - especially when the borders they define - territorial or otherwise - are transgressed

15. Afterwar is chiefly concerned with the moral wounds of war, which are coming to be called moral injury: the psychological, physiological, and spiritual consequences of having taken actions that transgressed and overwhelmed one’s moral standards and expectations

16. An Avowal of their weakness, an open expression of the poverty of their proofs.: On the morning after her Avowal it was ten o'clock before Clotilde left her room.: Beck, of course, fancying that it means a distinct Avowal of attention to herself.: In the provinces, to live in another person's house is an Avowal of poverty.: I have already transgressed the limits of mere prudence in the Avowal