sin

sin — noun

1. An act that breaks a rule taught by a religion or a widely accepted moral princi

1.名詞C2
釋義

An act that breaks a rule taught by a religion or a widely accepted moral principle, believed to offend God or damage a person's relationship with God — for instance, lying, stealing, or deliberately hurting another person.

例句

Ada confessed her sin to the priest and promised to make things right.

confess + sin; followed by to + person

Hari believes that harming another person is a sin against God's teachings.

sin against + belief system

同義詞
  • transgression

    more formal; can be legal, social, or religious

  • wrongdoing

    broader; covers any bad act without religious framing

  • offence

    can be legal or moral; less religious than sin

反義詞
  • virtue

    a morally good quality or act

  • good deed

    positive action that follows moral rules

用法筆記

Frequently used with commit, confess, or forgive as the verb. The phrase original sin refers to the first sin of Adam and Eve in the Christian tradition.

常見錯誤

He committed a sin by parking in a no-parking zone.
He committed a parking violation by parking in a no-parking zone.
💡Sin refers to religious or deeply moral wrongdoing, not ordinary rule-breaking.
I sinned the cake.
I sinned by eating the cake when I had promised to fast.
💡Sin is not a transitive verb taking a direct object of the thing done wrong.

2. The ways a person uses their body for physical pleasure, especially sexual activ

2.名詞C2
釋義

The ways a person uses their body for physical pleasure, especially sexual activity, that a religion considers morally wrong or shameful.

例句

The old teachings describe the sin of lust as a fire that consumes the spirit.

sin of + [desire/quality]

Élise read that certain bodily pleasures were called sins by early church leaders.

passive: were called sins by

同義詞
  • carnal sin

    specifically about physical, bodily desires; formal or religious

  • impurity

    a gentler, more general term for sexual wrongdoing in religious contexts

反義詞
  • chastity

    the state of avoiding sexual activity considered wrong

用法筆記

Often appears in the fixed phrase sin of the flesh or sins of the body. This sense is mostly found in historical, literary, or theological contexts rather than everyday speech.

3. A personal nine-digit number given by the Canadian government to citizens and pe

3.名詞
釋義

A personal nine-digit number given by the Canadian government to citizens and permanent residents, used for tax reporting, employment records, and accessing government benefits.

例句

Christopher applied for a new SIN after losing his wallet last month.

Employers in Canada must ask for your SIN when you start a new job.

required when starting a job in Canada

同義詞

用法筆記

Always written in capital letters as SIN (not lowercase). This abbreviation is specific to Canada — other countries use different terms such as Social Security Number (SSN) in the United States or National Insurance Number (NI) in the United Kingdom.

常見錯誤

I lost my sin card.
I lost my SIN card.
💡Always capitalise SIN as an abbreviation.
Please enter your sin number.
Please enter your SIN.
💡Do not add 'number' after SIN; the N already stands for 'number.'

4. An action that most people in a community would describe as terrible, shameful,

4.名詞B2
釋義

An action that most people in a community would describe as terrible, shameful, or morally unacceptable, even when no religious rule is broken.

例句

Wasting food while others go hungry is a sin, said Iker's mother.

collocation: (it) is a sin + to-infinitive / gerund

The team thought it was a sin to spend so much money on office decorations.

同義詞
  • crime

    stronger and more dramatic in informal use; can sound humorous

  • disgrace

    focuses on public shame rather than moral wrongness

反義詞

用法筆記

Used in everyday conversation to express strong disapproval. Unlike sense 1, this sense does not require a religious framework — it reflects social or personal moral judgment.

sin — verb

sin — abbreviation