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Từ điển American Heritage Dictionary 4th
degrade
de·grade (dĭ-grādʹ)v. de·grad·ed, de·grad·ing, de·gradesv. tr. 1. To reduce in grade, rank, or status; demote. 2. To lower in dignity; dishonor or disgrace: a scandal that degraded the participants. 3. To lower in moral or intellectual character; debase. 4. To reduce in worth or value: degrade a currency. 5. To impair in physical structure or function. 6. Geology. To lower or wear by erosion or weathering. 7. To cause (an organic compound) to undergo degradation.v. intr. 1. To fall below a normal state; deteriorate. 2. To undergo degradation; decompose: a chemical that degrades rapidly. [Middle English degraden, from Old French degrader, from Late Latin dēgradāre: Latin dē-, de- + Latin gradus, step; See ghredh- in Indo-European Roots.] de·gradʹer n. Synonyms: degrade, abase, debase, demean2, humble, humiliate These verbs mean to deprive of self-esteem or self-worth. Degrade implies reduction to a state of shame or disgrace: “If I pitied you for crying... you should spurn such pity.... Rise, and don't degrade yourself into an abject reptile!” (Emily Brontë). Abase refers principally to loss of rank or prestige: “Meg pardoned him, and Mrs. March's grave face relaxed... when she heard him declare that he would... abase himself like a worm before the injured damsel” (Louisa May Alcott). Debase implies reduction in quality or value: “debasing the moral currency” (George Eliot). Demean suggests lowering in social position: “It puts him where he can make the advances without demeaning himself” (William Dean Howells). Humble can refer to lowering in rank or, more often, to reducing in pride: dreamed of humbling his opponent. To humiliate is to subject to loss of self-respect or dignity: a defeat that humiliated both army and nation. See also synonyms at demote
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