skandāls

See also: Skandals

Latvian

Etymology

Via other European languages, ultimately borrowed from Ecclesiastical Latin scandalum (that on which one trips, cause of offense, literally stumbling block), from Ancient Greek σκάνδαλον (skándalon, a trap laid for an enemy, a cause of moral stumbling).

Pronunciation

Noun

skandāls m (1st declension)

  1. scandal (loud dispute, quarrel, brawl)
    ģimenes skandālsfamily scandal, quarrel
    rīkot, celt, sacelt skandāluto stir up a scandal
    ceļš bija aizsprostots un skandāls lielsthe road was jammed and (there was) a big scandal
    pircēja pienākums ir ievērot savu rindu, jo tieši ar to visbiežak sākas nožēlojamie veikalu skandāliit is the buyer's duty to keep in line, because disrespecting it is one of the most frequent causes of quarrels in shops
  2. scandal (undesirable, often obscene, event that receives public condemnation)
    politisks skandālspolitical scandal
    sabiedrisks skandālssocial scandal
    bet tas ir skandāls!... ieliek cilvēku trakomājā un aizmirst!.... un kādu cilvēku!... kas nācijai pavēris ceļu uz bagatībubut this is a scandal!... to put someone in a madhouse and forget it!... and such a (great) person!... (one) who opened the path to riches to the nation!

Declension

Declension of skandāls (1st declension)
singular plural
nominative skandāls skandāli
genitive skandāla skandālu
dative skandālam skandāliem
accusative skandālu skandālus
instrumental skandālu skandāliem
locative skandālā skandālos
vocative skandāl skandāli

Derived terms