Word familynounscandalizationscandalizerscandalousnessscandalmongerscandalmongeringscandalverbscandalizeadjectivescandalledscandalousadverbscandalously
1[countableC]RUMOUR/RUMOR an event in which someone, especially someone important, behaves in a bad way that shocks people 〔尤指牵涉重要人物的〕丑闻,丑事
It caused quite a scandal when he left his wife.
他离开妻子成了一大丑闻。
The college has recently been involved in a drugs scandal.
这所大学最近卷入了毒品丑闻。
He has been at the centre of a political scandal.
他成了一桩政治丑闻的焦点。
a major scandal involving the government
涉及政府的一桩重大丑闻
a series of financial scandals
一连串金融丑闻
a sex scandal that ruined his reputation
让他名誉扫地的性丑闻
They had already left the country when the scandal broke.
丑闻爆出时他们已经离开了这个国家。
2[uncountableU] talk about dishonest or immoral things that famous or important people are believed to have done 关于丑闻的言谈
The magazine is full of gossip and scandal.
这本杂志登载的全是八卦内容。
3be a scandalBritish EnglishBrE spokenSHOCK to be very shocking or unacceptable 令人震惊;不能接受
The price of petrol these days is an absolute scandal!
近日的汽油价格高得简直让人不能接受!
Examples from the Corpus
be a scandal• A free for all was a scandal.• Employment training in Britain is a scandal and is often run by Government-appointed has-beens from industryaccountable to no-one.• For the first Christians to claim this as the heart of their faithwas a scandal of the first order.• The marriagewas a scandal in Seoul.• A bug for efficiency, he felt that the waste of money and effort on doomed irrigation ventures was a scandal.• I mean the wagesare a scandal, aren't they?• Like the poll tax, the consequences will be a scandal.• The ShadowAgricultureMinister says privatisation would be a scandal and could threaten jobs in the timber industry.
nCOLLOCATIONS
verbs
cause a scandal
The vicar caused a scandal by having an affair with a young woman.
be involved in a scandal
A senior government official is involved in a political scandal.
be implicated in a scandal (=be suspected of being involved)
One of the ministers implicated in the scandal resigned.
be at the centre of a scandalBritish EnglishBrE, be at the center of a scandalAmerican EnglishAmE
The banker at the centre of the scandal has disappeared.
uncover/expose a scandal
The scandal was uncovered by a journalist.
a scandal breaks (=becomes known)
When the scandal broke in 1990, it forced the resignation of the bank's chairman.
a scandal erupts (=becomes known with serious effects)
A major scandal erupted in Washington last year.
the scandal surrounding something
They had tried to protect the prime minster from the scandal surrounding the arms sales.
ADJECTIVES/NOUN + scandal
a big/major scandal
The president was forced to resign following a major scandal.
a financial scandal (=involving money)
He was suspected of involvement in a major financial scandal.
a political scandal (=involving politicians)
The Health Secretary now finds himself at the centre of a political scandal.
a corruption scandal (=involving illegal payments)
a major police corruption scandal
a sex scandal
There are rumours of a sex scandal involving senior government ministers.
a public scandal (=one that people know about and discuss)
The award was soon the centre of a public scandal.
the Watergate/Whitewater etc scandal (=the scandal involving a particular place, organization etc)
The name of Richard Nixon will forever be associated with the Watergate scandal.
the worst scandal (=the biggest or most shocking)
Total losses resulting from India's worst financial scandal amounted to Rs31,000 million.
phrases
a hint/whiff of scandal (=the suggestion that someone may be involved in a scandal)
He vowed that no hint of scandal would ever be attached to him.
scandal broke• In the last days of 1990 a new scandal broke.• For some days after the scandal broke, the press could find out nothing about him.• Jameson lost his job and split up with his wife after the scandal broke.• He was summarily dismissed from his job and the scandal broke on the front pages of Britain's national press.• Casey died of a brain tumor before the scandal broke.• Ever since the scandal broke, the hunt has been on for scapegoats.
Originscandal
(1100-1200)Late Latinscandalum“offense”, from Greekskandalon