[VERB 动词]不理会;不顾;漠视 If you disregard something, you ignore it or do not take account of it.
[V n]
He disregarded the advice of his executives...
他对主管层的建议置若罔闻。
Critics say he allowed the police and security forces to disregard human rights.
批评人士说他听任警察和安全部队漠视人权。
Disregard is also a noun.
Whoever planted the bomb showed a total disregard for the safety of the public.
无论是谁放置的炸弹都是对公众安全的极端漠视。
Oxford
dis·re·gard/ˌdɪsrɪˈɡɑːd; NAmEˌdɪsrɪˈɡɑːrd/
verb
,
noun
disregarddisregardsdisregardeddisregardingverbdisregardsth ( formal) to not consider sth; to treat sth as unimportant 不理会;不顾;漠视SYN
ignore
◆The board completely disregarded my recommendations.董事会完全无视我的建议。◆Safety rules were disregarded.安全规定被忽视了。noun[uncountable ]disregard(for/of sb/sth) ( formal) the act of treating sb/sth as unimportant and not caring about them/it 漠视;忽视◆She shows a total disregard for other people's feelings.她丝毫不顾及别人的感受。dis·re·gard/ˌdɪsrɪˈɡɑːd; NAmEˌdɪsrɪˈɡɑːrd/
to ignore something or treat it as unimportant: He ordered the jury to disregard the witness’s last statement. Mark totally disregarded my advice.
disregard1 verb
disregard2 noun
disregarddisregard2 noun [singular, uncountable]
Examples
Collocations
when someone ignores something that they should not ignoredisregard for/of his disregard for her feelingstotal/reckless/complete/flagrant etc disregard Local councillors accused the terrorists of showing a complete disregard for human life.in disregard of something He said the bombing was in complete disregard of the Geneva Convention.