offend atの例文
- You never know who you might offend at a public place like the airport.
- One reason is that they know whatever position they take will offend at least one of their usual constituencies : doctors, insurers or the business community.
- Ranjit was very zealous of his privilege, and he was the last person the British could afford to offend at this time of crisis and uncertainty.
- Penalties are awarded if a player is caught offside, is involved in foul play, offends at the tackle, ruck or maul, or is involved in dangerous play at scrums and line-outs.
- As for the doctrine of transubstantiation, it " offends at the same time reason, experience, the testimony of all our senses, the eternal laws of nature, and the sublime ideas that we ought to form of the Supreme Being ".
- He's more of a provocateur, as indicated by the film he's currently shooting, " Major Payne "-- a comedy about a rattled military veteran that's sure to offend at least as many people as a Handi-Man movie would.
- "If someone new walks in, they have to tell one good joke that offends at least one person, or sing their alma mater, " said Linda Hinckley, an advertising account supervisor and regular on the 6 : 05 p . m . bar car to New Canaan.
- Some times these juveniles reach maturation and they develop into career criminals, or life-course-persistent offenders . " Career criminals begin committing antisocial behavior before entering grade school and are versatile in that they engage in an array of destructive behaviors, offend at exceedingly high rates, and are less likely to quit committing crime as they age ."
- They state that non-pedophilic offenders tend to offend at times of stress; have a later onset of offending; and have fewer, often familial, victims, while pedophilic offenders often start offending at an early age; often have a larger number of victims who are frequently extrafamilial; are more inwardly driven to offend; and have values or beliefs that strongly support an offense lifestyle.