Some damning information against them was discovered. 发现了足以对他们定罪的材料。
He was damned to perdition. 他万劫不复。
A nonobervant sin, damning him to hell. 一个违反戒律的罪诅咒他下地狱。
damning
[ adj ] threatening with damnation <adj.all>
Damn \Damn\ (d[a^]m), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Damned} (d[a^]md or d[a^]m"n[e^]d); p. pr. & vb. n. {Damning} (d[a^]m"[i^]ng or d[a^]m"n[i^]ng).] [OE. damnen dampnen (with excrescent p), OF. damner, dampner, F. damner, fr. L. damnare, damnatum, to condemn, fr. damnum damage, a fine, penalty. Cf. {Condemn}, {Damage}.] 1. To condemn; to declare guilty; to doom; to adjudge to punishment; to sentence; to censure.
He shall not live; look, with a spot I damn him. --Shak.
2. (Theol.) To doom to punishment in the future world; to consign to perdition; to curse.
3. To condemn as bad or displeasing, by open expression, as by denuciation, hissing, hooting, etc.
You are not so arrant a critic as to damn them [the works of modern poets] . . . without hearing. --Pope.
Damn with faint praise, assent with civil leer, And without sneering teach the rest to sneer. --Pope.
Note: Damn is sometimes used interjectionally, imperatively, and intensively.
Damning \Damn"ing\, a. That damns; damnable; as, damning evidence of guilt.
Since the author had clearly missed the boat, the honorable thing for Random House and Mr. Bianco would have been to bury the damning evidence.
A damning report by the District Auditor, the government's council spending watchdog, left Sheffield with egg on its face and appearing incompetent. A backlash is now ensuing.
His sojourns in Bulgaria and East Berlin, where someone of his background would have been known to the secret police, and the aid he received from Sergei Antonov, a Bulgarian state airline employee, were part of a damning chain of evidence.
Even more damning, in a way, is Mr. Barros's demonstration that Norman, in responding to repeated inquiries by the Canadian security authorities in the 1940s and 1950s, steadfastly lied about his membership in the Communist Party during the 1930s.
What the seemingly damning statistics really measure, Ford says, is the impact of years of anti-Ford publicity.
Fred Wertheimer, president of Common Cause, which filed the original ethics complaint against the five senators in October 1989, lambasted the committee's action as a "cop-out" and a "damning indictment of the committee."
Pendley said the confession was damning evidence that the north could not refute. "You thought you had committed the perfect crime, but, like all criminals, you made a mistake," he said.
As damning as its conclusions are, the report concedes that some aspects of the affair remain "an enigma."
It is being seen instead as a damning indictment of Pretoria's homeland policy, the centerpiece of grand apartheid's philosophy of separating blacks into tribal areas and giving them their own government.
He said the transcript was "damning" for Yeltsin because it portrays him as inept just as he is trying to win a seat in the new Congress of People's Deputies.
Fats & Fibers The U.S. National Research Council says the evidence indicting animal fat as a cause for cancer, especially of colon and breast cancer, is so damning that the council recommends that most Americans decrease their consumption of fats.
The fact is Rudolph simply did not want to be confronted with the damning evidence against him," Sher said.
The brothers claim they were denied redress in British courts against a damning Department of Trade and Industry report in 1990 about their business affairs.
It was the backbone of the damning Board of Trade report on Maxwell. The investigation was headed by a senior PW partner - Martin Harris.