disservice

English

Etymology

From dis- + service.

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /dɪ(s)ˈsɜːvɪs/
  • (US) enPR: dis·sər´vĭs, IPA(key): /dɪ(s)ˈsɝvɪs/

Noun

disservice (countable and uncountable, plural disservices)

  1. Service that results in harm; an (intentionally or unintentionally) unhelpful, harmful action.
    • 2014, Michele Kaschub, Janice Smith, Promising Practices in 21st Century Music Teacher Education, Oxford University Press (→ISBN)
      Often schools of music focus solely on the canon of Western classical art music, but this is a disservice to music educators who will have to deal with students from many different backgrounds and preferences.
    • 2018 July 5, Sam Greer, “Games want to offer us many roads but Kentucky Route Zero is the one road that matters”, in Eurogamer:
      Treating narratives like something you can stretch out to give more value does a disservice to players and our engagement.
    One renders young persons a disservice by heaping unearned rewards on them.

Translations

Verb

disservice (third-person singular simple present disservices, present participle disservicing, simple past and past participle disserviced)

  1. To disserve, to provide a disservice to; to provide harmful or inadequate service to.
    • 1975, Sarah Katharine Thomson, Learning resource centers in community colleges
      One librarian said, "I could double the circulation tomorrow by closing the periodical stacks and counting every time I handed out a magazine, but I would be disservicing our readers."

Translations

References

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