deject

English

Etymology

From Old French dejeter, from Latin deicere (to throw down).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /dɪˈdʒɛkt/
  • Rhymes: -ɛkt

Verb

deject (third-person singular simple present dejects, present participle dejecting, simple past and past participle dejected)

  1. (transitive) Make sad or dispirited.
    • 1743, Robert Drury, The Pleasant, and Surprizing Adventures of Mr. Robert Drury, during his Fifteen Years Captivity on the Island of Madagascar, London, p. 73,
      [] the Thoughts of my Friends, and native Country, and the Improbability of ever seeing them again, made me very melancholy; and dejected me to that Degree, that sometimes I could not forbear indulging my Grief in private, and bursting out into a Flood of Tears.
  2. (obsolete, transitive) To cast down.
    • (Can we date this quote?) Nicholas Udall
      Christ dejected himself even unto the hells.
    • 1642, Thomas Fuller, The Holy State, Cambridge: John Williams, Book 5, Chapter 1, p. 358,
      [] sometimes she dejects her eyes in a seeming civility; and many mistake in her a cunning for a modest look.

Translations

Quotations

  • 1927 Harold Victor Routh: God, Man, & Epic Poetry: A Study in Comparative Literature (page 215)
    Vergil succeeds in filling Hades with all that depresses and dejects in his world, so that Aeneas encounters the causes of Augustan pessimism.
  • 1933 Arthur Melville Jordan: Educational Psychology (page 60)
    On the other hand, there is nothing which dejects school children quite so much as failure.

Derived terms

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