different between abase vs dispirit
abase
English
Etymology
From Late Middle English abaishen, abashen, abaisse, abassen, abesse, abessen (“to be upset; to embarrass; to surprise; to confound; to bend down, stoop; to abase, degrade, disgrace”), from Middle French abaisser, from Old French abaissier, abessier (“to prostrate oneself; to lower, reduce”) (also compare Old French esbahir (“to amaze”), Vulgar Latin abbassi?re (“to lower”)), from a- (“prefix indicating movement towards something”) (from Latin ad (“toward, to”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h?éd (“at, to”)) + baissier (“to lower”) (from Medieval Latin bassus (“short of stature, low; base”), possibly from Ancient Greek ?????? (básis, “foot; base, foundation”), ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *g?em- (“to step”)). The spelling of the English word has been influenced by base.Cognate with Spanish abajo (“down, downstairs; below”).
Pronunciation
- (Received Pronunciation, General American) IPA(key): /??be?s/
- Rhymes: -e?s
Verb
abase (third-person singular simple present abases, present participle abasing, simple past and past participle abased)
- (transitive) To lower, as in condition in life, office, rank, etc., so as to cause pain or hurt feelings; to degrade, to depress, to humble, to humiliate. [from c. 1350–1470]
- (transitive, archaic) To lower physically; to depress; to cast or throw down; to stoop. [from c. 1350–1470]
- (transitive, obsolete) To lower in value, in particular by altering the content of alloys in coins; to debase. [from mid 16th – mid 18th c.]
Synonyms
- (to lower so as to cause pain or hurt feelings): degrade, demean, depress, discredit, disgrace, dishonor, humble, humiliate, sink
- (to lower physically): bring down, lower, reduce
- (to lower in value): downgrade
Antonyms
- (to lower so as to cause pain or hurt feelings): aggrandise, dignify, elevate, exalt, extol, honor, promote, raise, uplift,
Derived terms
- abasedly
- abasement
- abaser
Related terms
- abash
Translations
References
Further reading
- abase (disambiguation) on Wikipedia.Wikipedia
- abase in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
- abase in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
Ido
Etymology
From abas +? -e.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /a?ba.se/
Interjection
abase
- down with
abase From the web:
- what abate mean
- what based the little bird
- what abates fire
- what abase means
- what abate mean in the bible
- what abide means to you
- what does abashed mean
- what does abashed mean in the bible
dispirit
English
Alternative forms
- disspirit
Etymology
dis- +? spirit
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -?r?t
Verb
dispirit (third-person singular simple present dispirits, present participle dispiriting, simple past and past participle dispirited)
- (transitive) To lower the morale of; to make despondent; to dishearten.
Derived terms
Translations
dispirit From the web:
- dispirited meaning
- what does dispirited mean
- what does disparity mean
- what does dispirited
- what does dispirito mean
- what does dispirited person mean
- what do dispiriting meaning
- what does disparate mean dictionary
you may also like
- abase vs dispirit
- inurn vs conceal
- dose vs proportion
- federation vs team
- inordinate vs libidinous
- ruin vs kill
- proper vs correspondent
- idiot vs dope
- honest vs equitable
- decrease vs subjugation
- mumble vs whine
- approval vs tolerance
- respective vs peculiar
- felicity vs mirth
- high-spirited vs impudent
- indulge vs recompense
- single vs elementary
- giddiness vs gayety
- remark vs affirm
- woeful vs miserable