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Ill-famed   /ɪl-feɪmd/   Listen
Ill-famed

adjective
1.
Known widely and usually unfavorably.  Synonyms: infamous, notorious.  "The tenderloin district was notorious for vice" , "The infamous Benedict Arnold"






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Ill-famed" Quotes from Famous Books



... upon the soil that feeds man! You at least shall live no more to be a fell bane to men who eat the fruit of the all-nourishing earth, and who will bring hither perfect hecatombs. Against cruel death neither Typhoeus shall avail you nor ill-famed Chimera, but here shall the Earth and shining ...
— Hesiod, The Homeric Hymns, and Homerica • Homer and Hesiod

... most turbulent tribe, for which see my "Pilgrimage."[EN37] Their head Shaykh, Sa'd the Robber, who still flourished in 1853, is dead; but he has been succeeded by one of his sons, Shaykh Hudayfah, who is described with simple force as being a "dog more biting than his sire." Between these ill-famed haunts of the Beni Harb and Jeddah rises the Jebel Subh, "a mountain remarkable for its magnitude" (4500 feet), inhabited by the Beni Subh, a fighting clan of the "Sons ...
— The Land of Midian, Vol. 2 • Richard Burton

... varying lethal capacities are ascribed to the centipede, the scorpion, the kissing-bug, and sundry other forms of insect life. The whole matter is based upon the slenderest foundations. I don't mean, by this, that these ill-famed species are wholly innocuous. It would be highly inadvisable to snatch a kiss from a copperhead or to stroke a tarantula's fur the wrong way. But one could do it and live to boast of the achievement. Pseudoscience ...
— Stories from Everybody's Magazine • 1910 issues of Everybody's Magazine

... partner the one I knew he was perhaps playing a trick on him. I do not know why I had an inkling that it would appeal to Strickland's sense of humour to bring a furious stockbroker over to Paris on a fool's errand to an ill-famed house in a mean street. Still, I thought I had better go and see. Next day about six o'clock I took a cab to the Rue des Moines, but dismissed it at the corner, since I preferred to walk to the hotel and look at it before I went ...
— The Moon and Sixpence • W. Somerset Maugham



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