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dumbing down

См. также в других словарях:

  • Dumbing down — is a pejorative term for a perceived trend to lower the intellectual content of literature, education, news, and other aspects of culture. According to John Algeo, former editor of American Speech, the neologism dumb down meaning revise so as to… …   Wikipedia

  • dumbing down — noun [noncount] She thinks television is contributing to the dumbing down of America. • • • Main Entry: ↑dumb * * * ˌdumbing ˈdown ; noun uncountable …   Useful english dictionary

  • dumbing-down — see ↑dumb down below. • • • Main Entry: ↑dumb …   Useful english dictionary

  • dumbing down —    If something, such as a television programme or a film production, isdumbed down, it is deliberately made less intelligent or less demanding in order to attract a larger audience.     Some TV channels are dumbing down their programmes in an… …   English Idioms & idiomatic expressions

  • Dumbing Us Down —   …   Wikipedia

  • Dumbing Up — Studio album by World Party Released 2000, 2006 Genre Rock Label Seaview …   Wikipedia

  • dumb down — PHRASAL VERB If you dumb down something, you make it easier for people to understand, especially when this spoils it. [V P n] This sounded like a case for dumbing down the magazine, which no one favored. [Also V n P, V] Derived words: dumbing… …   English dictionary

  • dumb down — phrasal verb [intransitive/transitive] Word forms dumb down : present tense I/you/we/they dumb down he/she/it dumbs down present participle dumbing down past tense dumbed down past participle dumbed down to make something simpler and easier to… …   English dictionary

  • dumb down — transitive verb Date: 1933 to lower the level of difficulty and the intellectual content of (as a textbook); also to lower the general level of intelligence in < the dumbing down of society > …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • dumb down —    to make simpler    The phrase refers to public examinations, which retain the former names and grades but are set or marked so that a greater proportion of examinees appears to pass or do well; or to broadcasting, where effort is being made to …   How not to say what you mean: A dictionary of euphemisms

  • Math–verbal achievement gap — Graph showing the Math–Verbal Achievement Gap in the United States The math–verbal achievement gap is a phenomenon first observed by Richard Rothstein in a brief, 2002 article written in The New York Times.[1 …   Wikipedia

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