Demoralising - English meaning
Demoralising – definitions in English dictionary
verbCause (someone) to lose confidence or hope.
Usage examples:
The general strike had demoralized the trade unionsverbCorrupt the morals of (someone).
Usage examples:
She hastened her daughter's steps, lest she be demoralized by beholding the free manners of these ‘…
adjectiveCausing someone to lose confidence or hope; disheartening.
Usage examples:
The demoralizing effect of imprisonment
verbTo weaken the confidence of someone
Usage examples:
The team was tired and thoroughly demoralized.
Demoralising translation into English
Demoralising: translate from English into Chinese
Demoralising: translate from English into Dutch
Demoralising: translate from English into French
Demoralising: translate from English into German
Demoralising: translate from English into Hindi
Demoralising: translate from English into Italian
Demoralising: translate from English into Korean
Demoralising: translate from English into Russian
Demoralising: translate from English into Spanish
Word origin
late 18th century: from French démoraliser (a word of the French Revolution), from dé- (expressing reversal) + moral ‘moral’, from Latin moralis .
Study English words for free
Worder is a free project where you can save words, add translations and study English words.
In order to use our service, you need a free account. You can sign in or sign up an account right now. You can use it in our application afterward.
* The project is being actively developed right now. So, not all functions are available, but we update it regularly.
Demoralising – similar words
Demoralising synonims
My Worder
Please register or authorize in order to use all the features of our service.
Our statistic
🙏 Support our free project clicking on the ads below: