shamed


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  • adj

Synonyms for shamed

showing a sense of guilt

Related Words

suffering shame

Based on WordNet 3.0, Farlex clipart collection. © 2003-2012 Princeton University, Farlex Inc.
References in periodicals archive ?
person who is being shamed and the inner processes that take place
those we shamed (https://books.google.com/books/about/Public Papers of
This appears to be resolved in the dream by their only being 'eyes for one' to avoid seeing and being shamed by the other's gaze.
"While celebrities face constant scrutiny from strangers online, our survey respondents were more likely to be shamed by relatives and acquaintances.
The closer feelings of shame are to a person's core identity shaping values and the more the social context in which they are shamed means to that person, the deeper the impact (Madianou 2012: 5, 6).
Several authors have proposed that internal/internalized shame is linked to complex memory systems such as scenes of previous episodes of being shamed (Kaufman, 1989), deriving from intense and enduring levels of shame experienced in early social interactions and throughout life (Claesson & Sohlberg, 2002; Kaufman, 1989; Lewis, 1992; Matos & Pinto-Gouveia, 2009).
Working from Plato's seminal text on shame, the Gorgias, Tarnopolsky follows the winding path of Socrates' elenchus through the dialogue, as the argument progresses down a devolving path that parallels the devolving quality of interlocutor--from the good-natured, well-intended rhetorician Gorgias, to his brazen student Polus, to the intimidating Callicles, one of the Thirty Tyrants, puppets of Sparta who shamed their city, a champion of freedom, by victimizing foreigners and citizens.
The median score for shame (median=16) in the data suggests that 50 percent or more of the students who completed the survey at times felt shamed by others in reference to a range of personal attributes.
Now that the Bear and Stearns's executives have been cleared, they can legitimately say that they bear no responsibility for what happened and hence have absolutely no reason to be shamed. Thus, shame becomes a non-issue unless one can at least establish criminality.
Even in America, often a woman's first response to sexual harassment or assault is to feel soiled and shamed, as if she had brought the unwanted advances on herself.
Shamed people often feel exposed, powerless, and worthless (Hoffman, 1998; Tangney & Dearing, 2002).