-
1 déprécier
-
2 rabaisser
rabaisser [ʀabese]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. [+ personne, efforts, talent, travail] to disparageb. [+ prix] to reduce• il voulait 10 000 € par mois, mais il a dû rabaisser ses prétentions he wanted 10,000 euros a month but he had to lower his sights2. reflexive verb• se rabaisser devant qn to humble o.s. before sb* * *ʀabese
1.
verbe transitif to belittle [mérite, personne]
2.
se rabaisser verbe pronominal ( en paroles) to run oneself down; ( par son comportement) to demean oneself* * *ʀabese vt1) (= dénigrer) to belittle2) [prix, chiffre] to reduce* * *rabaisser verb table: aimerA vtr1 to lower [prétentions]; to belittle [mérite, valeur]; to belittle [personne]; rabaisser l'orgueil de qn to humble sb's pride;2 to reduce [taux].B se rabaisser vpr ( en paroles) to belittle oneself; ( par son comportement) to demean oneself (devant qn before sb).[rabɛse] verbe transitif1. [diminuer - prétentions] to moderate, to reduce ; [ - niveau] to lower ; [ - orgueil] to humble ; [ - prix] to reduce, to lowerde tels actes rabaissent l'homme au niveau des animaux such actions reduce man to the level of an animal————————se rabaisser verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)2. [s'avilir] to degrade oneself -
3 diminuer
diminuer [diminye]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verba. ( = réduire) to reduceb. ( = rabaisser) [+ mérite, talent] to belittle2. intransitive verba. [violence, intensité, intérêt, ardeur] to diminish ; [lumière] to fade ; [bruit] to die down ; [pluie] to let upb. [effectifs, nombre, valeur, pression] to decrease ; [provisions] to run low ; [forces] to decline* * *diminɥe
1.
1) ( réduire) to reduce [quantité, durée, niveau, frais, risques] (à to; de by); to lower [taux, taxe, salaire]2) ( modérer) to dampen [enthousiasme, courage]3) ( rabaisser) [personne] to belittle [exploit, personne]; [fait]diminuer les mérites/le talent de quelqu'un — to detract from somebody's merits/talent
4) ( affaiblir) to weaken [personne]; to sap [forces]5) ( en tricot) to decrease [mailles]
2.
verbe intransitif1) ( se réduire) [facture, chômage, taux, prix] to come ou go down (de by); [pouvoir d'achat] to be reduced; [salaire] to fall; [écart] to close; [réserves, consommation, quantité] to decrease; [croissance, volume, déficit, différence] to decrease; [production, ventes, demande] to fall off; [bougie, bouteille] to go down2) ( faiblir) [activité, intérêt, attaques, violence] to fall off; [pression, tension] to decrease; [bruit, flamme, orage, rire, rumeurs, colère] to die down; [forces, capacités] to diminish; [courage] to fail; [ardeur] to cool; [température, fièvre] to go down* * *diminɥe1. vt1) [niveau, nombre, coût, prix, dépense, effectif, production, risque] to reduce, [pression] to reduce, [taux] to reduce, to lower, [crédits] to reduce, to cut2) [ardeur, intérêt] to lessen3) [personne] (physiquement) to weaken4) (= dénigrer) to belittle2. vi[pression] to decrease, [prix, nombre, effectifs] to go down, [impôts, volume, fréquence, risques] to decrease, [température] to go down, to fall* * *diminuer verb table: aimerA vtr1 ( réduire) to reduce [quantité, intensité, durée, niveau, chances] (à to; de by); to lower [taux, taxe, salaire]; pour diminuer les frais/pertes/risques to reduce the cost/losses/risks; diminuer sa consommation d'alcool to reduce one's alcohol intake;2 ( modérer) to dampen [enthousiasme, courage]; le salaire proposé a vite diminué mon ardeur the salary which was offered soon dampened my enthusiasm;3 ( dénigrer) to diminish [exploit, succès, réussite]; diminuer les mérites/le talent de qn to detract from sb's merits/talent;5 ( en tricot) to decrease [mailles] ; diminuez deux mailles à chaque rang decrease (by) two stitches on every row; diminuez de deux mailles decrease (by) two stitches; arrêtez de diminuer stop decreasing.B vi1 ( se réduire) [facture, montant, chômage, taux, prix] to come ou go down (de by), to decrease (de by); [écart] to close; [réserves, consommation, quantité] to decrease, to diminish; [croissance, volume, déficit, différence] to decrease; [production, ventes, demande] to fall off; [bougie, bouteille] to go down; notre pouvoir d'achat/notre salaire a diminué our purchasing power/our salary has gone down; les jours diminuent the days are getting shorter;2 ( faiblir) [activité, intérêt, attaques, violence] to fall off; [pression, tension] to decrease, to diminish; [bruit, flamme, orage, rire, rumeurs, colère] to die down; [forces, capacités] to diminish; [courage] to fail; [ardeur] to cool; [température, fièvre] to go down.[diminɥe] verbe transitif1. [réduire - prix, impôts, frais, ration] to reduce, to cut ; [ - longueur] to shorten ; [ - taille, effectifs, volume, vitesse, consommation] to reduce2. [affaiblir - personne][déprécier - qualité]cela ne diminue en rien votre mérite this doesn't detract from ou lessen your merit at all4. [en tricot] to decrease6. (familier) [employé] to cut the pay of————————[diminɥe] verbe intransitif[volume] to decrease2. [s'affaiblir - forces] to ebb away, to wane, to lessen ; [ - peur] to lessen ; [ - intérêt, attention] to drop, to lessen, to dwindle3. [raccourcir]les jours diminuent the days are getting shorter ou drawing in -
4 déprécier
déprécier [depʀesje]➭ TABLE 71. transitive verb( = faire perdre de la valeur à) to depreciate ; ( = dénigrer) to belittle2. reflexive verb* * *depʀesje1) Économie, Finance to depreciate2) ( rabaisser) to disparage, to depreciate* * *depʀesje vt* * *déprécier verb table: plierA vtr2 ( rabaisser) to disparage, to depreciate.B se déprécier vpr2 ( se rabaisser) to put oneself down.[depresje] verbe transitif————————se déprécier verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)————————se déprécier verbe pronominal intransitif -
5 dévaloriser
dévaloriser [devalɔʀize]➭ TABLE 11. transitive verb[+ marchandises, collection] to reduce the value of ; [+ monnaie, diplôme] to undermine the value of2. reflexive verb* * *devalɔʀize
1.
1) Économie, Finance ( diminuer la valeur de) to reduce the value of [monnaie, produit]2) ( diminuer le prestige de) to depreciate [objet]; to belittle [personne]
2.
se dévaloriser verbe pronominal1) ( en valeur) to lose value; ( en prestige) to lose prestige2) ( se déprécier soi-même) to put oneself down* * *devalɔʀize vt* * *dévaloriser verb table: aimerA vtrB se dévaloriser vpr1 ( en valeur) to lose value; ( en prestige) to lose prestige; le métier se dévalorise the job is losing its prestige;2 ( se déprécier soi-même) to put oneself down.[devalɔrize] verbe transitif————————se dévaloriser verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)[se discréditer] to lose credibility————————se dévaloriser verbe pronominal intransitif -
6 rapetisser
rapetisser [ʀap(ə)tise]➭ TABLE 1 intransitive verb[jours] to get shorter* * *ʀap(ə)tise
1.
verbe transitif lit
2.
verbe intransitif to shrink
3.
se rapetisser verbe pronominal to shrink* * *ʀap(ə)tise1. vtrapetisser qch (= rendre plus petit) — to make sth smaller, (= rendre plus court) to shorten sth, (= faire paraître plus petit) to make sth look smaller
2. vi1) (en apparence) [personne] to shrink, [forme, ombre, image] to shrink2) (réellement) [personne] to shrink, [forme, ombre, image] to shrink* * *rapetisser verb table: aimerA vtr lit la distance/ce miroir rapetisse les objets distance/this mirror makes things look smaller.B vi [jours] to get shorter, to draw in; [vêtement] to shrink; [personne] to shrink, to get shorter.C se rapetisser vpr [vieillard] to shrink, to get shorter.[raptise] verbe transitif1. [rendre plus petit] to make smaller2. [faire paraître plus petit]rapetisser quelqu'un/quelque chose to make somebody/something seem smaller3. [dévaloriser] to belittle————————[raptise] verbe intransitif————————se rapetisser verbe pronominal (emploi réfléchi)[se dévaloriser] -
7 rabaisser
= dénigrerDictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > rabaisser
-
8 sous-estimer
= dénigrerDictionnaire juridique, politique, économique et financier > sous-estimer
См. также в других словарях:
belittle — (v.) 1781, to make small, from BE (Cf. be ) + LITTLE (Cf. little) (v.); first recorded in writings of Thomas Jefferson (and probably coined by him), who was roundly execrated for it in England: Belittle! What an expression! It may be an elegant… … Etymology dictionary
belittle — is, to the surprise of many, an Americanism, disapproved of by Fowler (1926) as an ‘undesirable alien’, at least in its meaning ‘decry, depreciate’. • (Never belittle anything that your patients earnestly believe Oxford Companion to US History,… … Modern English usage
Belittle — Be*lit tle, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Belittled}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Belittling}.] To make little or less in a moral sense; to speak of in a depreciatory or contemptuous way. T. Jefferson. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
belittle — index cavil, condescend (patronize), contemn, decry, defame, demean (make lower), demote, denigrate … Law dictionary
belittle — depreciate, disparage, derogate, detract, minimize, *decry Analogous words: underestimate, undervalue, underrate (see base words at ESTIMATE): diminish, reduce, lessen, *decrease Antonyms: aggrandize, magnify Contrasted words: *exalt: heighten,… … New Dictionary of Synonyms
belittle — [v] detract bad mouth, blister, criticize, cut down to size*, cut to the quick*, decry, deprecate, depreciate, deride, derogate, diminish, discount, discredit, disparage, dispraise, downgrade, downplay, dump on*, knock*, lower, minimize, pan,… … New thesaurus
belittle — ► VERB ▪ dismiss as unimportant … English terms dictionary
belittle — ☆ belittle [bē lit′ l, bilit′ l ] vt. belittled, belittling [coined ( c. 1780) by JEFFERSON Thomas] to make seem little, less important, etc.; speak slightingly of; depreciate SYN. DISPARAGE belittlement n. belittler n … English World dictionary
belittle, disparage — These words are related in meaning: to speak of as unimportant, to regard something as less important or impressive than it apparently is. Disparage is a stronger word than belittle in that it tends to bring reproach or discredit upon the topic… … Dictionary of problem words and expressions
belittle — [[t]bɪlɪ̱t(ə)l[/t]] belittles, belittling, belittled VERB If you belittle someone or something, you say or imply that they are unimportant or not very good. [V n] We mustn t belittle her outstanding achievement... [V n] It makes no sense to… … English dictionary
belittle — UK [bɪˈlɪt(ə)l] / US verb [transitive] Word forms belittle : present tense I/you/we/they belittle he/she/it belittles present participle belittling past tense belittled past participle belittled to say or think that someone or something is… … English dictionary