むし
Meanings
Noun
Verb (する)
1. disregarding; ignoring
Pitch accent
Composed of
nothing; naught; nought; un-; non-
viewing as ...; seeing as ...; treating as ...; regarding as ...
Used in vocabulary (4 in total)
completely disregarding
ignoring a traffic light; red-light violation; running a red light; jaywalking
disregard for human rights
Examples (33 in total)
Why is she ignoring me?
Are you ignoring me?
The driver ignored the stoplight.
If I were you, I'd ignore it.
Why do you ignore me?
Ignore him.
It is better to ignore this point.
John ignored my advice.
Tom has been ignoring me.
Didn't you disregard a stop sign?
Why is everyone ignoring me?
If the phone rings again, I plan to ignore it.
I learned not to ignore my pain.
They defied the policeman's order.
I tried to talk to Mary, but she ignored me.
War broke out when the treaty was ignored.
My voice was ignored in the discussion.
The policeman blamed me for ignoring traffic rules.
She ignored the fact that he was ill.
She deliberately ignored me on the street.
I cannot, however, neglect his warning.
He did not ignore our request, and neither did she.
The differences were minor, so I ignored them.
You should ignore what he says.
Not only did they ignore the protest, they also lied to the press.
The municipal council all but ignored the gravity of the pollution.
If I were you, I would ignore it.
Ignore what he said. He was only joking.
My uncle kept on drinking in spite of his doctor's advice.
Kate glanced at Chris and then ignored him, making him feel miserable.
They neglected his advice, with the result the their company went bankrupt.
Jenny could not ignore her parents' desire for her safety.
The girl in the red dress ignored the man dressed in black and called a friend on her cellphone.