Reputation in a sentence as a noun

But he's putting his own reputation behind AirBnb, and AirBnb is lying.

She's not going to suffer in compensation or reputation.

In an extreme case they might lose their job and take a reputation hit, but most likely they'll just leave and get a higher salary elsewhere.

They only want people who don't care about buyer reputation, and have deep enough pockets and the expectation that chargebacks and fraud will occur.

It's a little early to say for sure, but I predict this will do more to hurt Apple's reputation in the tech community than anything they've done before.

" He goes on to say that he "enjoy[s] a reputation of being someone of intense understanding and observation with a keen strategic instinct.

Even though it was the team I dreamed of being on, and the one I could make the most impact on, I was told by my manager that my reputation was irreparably befouled.

Not that OpenBSD was comically insecure --- it wasn't --- but that its reputation so far outstripped its actually differentiation.

I'm passionate about providing great open source tools, my business and reputation are built on Capistrano and I don't want to give it up, but it's destroying me.

We got that reputation by doing some concrete things differently than our competitors: we staffed an appropriate number of CSRs, trained them to be nice to customers, did a lot of gratuitous tech support for basic computer problems, and were flexible about resolving billing disputes.

Reputation definitions

noun

the state of being held in high esteem and honor

See also: repute

noun

notoriety for some particular characteristic; "his reputation for promiscuity"

noun

the general estimation that the public has for a person; "he acquired a reputation as an actor before he started writing"; "he was a person of bad report"

See also: report