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 mistrust [,mis'trʌst]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 不信任, 疑惑

vt. 不信任, 疑惑

vi. 不信任, 疑惑




    mistrust
    [ noun ]
    1. doubt about someone's honesty

    2. <noun.cognition>
    3. the trait of not trusting others

    4. <noun.attribute>
    [ verb ]
    1. regard as untrustworthy; regard with suspicion; have no faith or confidence in

    2. <verb.cognition> distrust suspect


    Mistrust \Mis*trust"\, n.
    Want of confidence or trust; suspicion; distrust. --Milton.


    Mistrust \Mis*trust"\, v. t.
    1. To regard with jealousy or suspicion; to suspect; to doubt
    the integrity of; to distrust.

    I will never mistrust my wife again. --Shak.

    2. To forebode as near, or likely to occur; to surmise.

    By a divine instinct, men's minds mistrust
    Ensuing dangers. --Shak.

    1. But the hope is that gathering Arabs and Israelis in the same room for the first time will break down mistrust.
    2. But his beatification has upset many Catholics, not least among the Jesuit community who mistrust Opus Dei's conservative bent. Critics say he is being beatified with undue, even offensive, haste.
    3. The result is mistrust and criticism from all around.
    4. In the event, persistent mistrust of Labour did the trick for the Tories.
    5. As I said to General Secretary Gorbachev when we first met in 1985, we do not mistrust each other because we're armed; we're armed because we mistrust each other.
    6. As I said to General Secretary Gorbachev when we first met in 1985, we do not mistrust each other because we're armed; we're armed because we mistrust each other.
    7. However sweeping the legal changes, apartheid will leave a legacy of mistrust, prejudice and economic inequality that may take decades to overcome.
    8. The current mess at Myerson & Kuhn is mostly about money and mistrust.
    9. The state Air Resources Board, citing mistrust between regional air quality officials and business and environmentalist leaders, voted 6-1 Friday to postpone action on the plan for 60 days.
    10. But Yankelovich also noted a persistent strain of mistrust toward the Soviets, with 60 percent describing the Soviet Union as a major threat to the United States, down from 76 percent before Gorbachev took office.
    11. "The Poles mistrust us greatly, and, we think, without reason," shrugged a senior West German official.
    12. "There's a history of mistrust.
    13. Many teachers in formerly communist countries have grown to mistrust unions, said Zoltan Pokorni, of the new Hungarian Democratic Teachers Union.
    14. 'If Saddam Hussein rates a five out of five on the barometer of mistrust, King Hussein gets a four,' a senior foreign ministry official said.
    15. Opposition leaders and Western diplomats say the deep mistrust between nationalist Slavs and ethnic Turks has been fanned since the mid-1980s by Zhivkov's assimilation policy and by anti-Turkish propaganda.
    16. As recent polls have shown, Central Americans overwhelmingly mistrust the Sandinistas.
    17. Mourners at the funeral for President Lazarus E. Salii were told that dissention and mistrust must be resolved, after the first two presidents of this western Pacific archipelago have died from violent means.
    18. Havel, who only a month ago was a banned playwright reviled in the official press, said Urbanek admitted during their unprecedented meeting that his Communist Party faces "deeply rooted mistrust," and must change.
    19. Germany and Czechoslovakia signed a friendship treaty in Prague, and leaders expressed hope that the pact would allay mistrust rooted in the Nazi era.
    20. Others said the emergency order spawned confusion and public mistrust at time when the Board of Trade's image has been tarnished by a federal investigation of suspected trading fraud.
    21. He said that skepticism about public officials is healthy but that "a danger occurs when skepticism becomes cynicism and mistrust." Mitchell renewed his call for a ban on speaking fees, coupled with a pay raise.
    22. But his unlimited ambitions and mistrust of his minions prompted him to place family members in lead positions.
    23. However, he said, mistrust is widespread on both sides.
    24. I just had to wait for the right time to say this." But many Ukrainians still mistrust Mr. Kravchuk for the way he waffled during the coup.
    25. Pollsters say his appeal stems from voters' mistrust of professional politicians.
    26. We call on all people of good faith in the world to put aside all doubt, preconceptions and mistrust.
    27. But it can do it only if there is a shared understanding of the need for candor, consultation and trust." "Divided government cannot work in a polarized society, one in which mistrust and deceit are widespread," Mitchell added.
    28. Despite a recent tax cut that might help sales, they seem to have reached a point of total mistrust of government policies.
    29. We either continue with a moribund Tory government, or take a chance with a party many of us mistrust.
    30. U.S. officials say they hope the joint projects will break down some of the deep mistrust that has marked dealings on the issue for many years.
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