WordDisk
  • Reading
    • Shortcuts
      •   Home
      •   All Articles
      •   Read from Another Site
      Sources
      • Wikipedia
      • Simple Wikipedia
      • VOA Learning English
      • Futurity
      • The Conversation
      • MIT News
      • Harvard Gazette
      • Cambridge News
      • YDS/YÖKDİL Passages
      Topics
      • Technology
      • Engineering
      • Business
      • Economics
      • Human
      • Health
      • Energy
      • Biology
      • Nature
      • Space
  •  Log in
  •  Sign up
2.57
History
Add

demoralized adjective [ dɪˈmɒrəlʌɪzd ]

• having lost confidence or hope; disheartened.
• "how do you motivate demoralized employees?"

demoralize verb

• cause (someone) to lose confidence or hope.
• "the General Strike had demoralized the trade unions"
Similar: dishearten, dispirit, deject, cast down, depress, dismay, daunt, discourage, unman, unnerve, crush, sap, shake, throw, cow, subdue, undermine, devitalize, weaken, enfeeble, enervate, break someone's spirit, bring someone low, knock the stuffing out of, knock for six, knock sideways, dispirited, disheartened, downhearted, dejected, downcast, low, depressed, despairing, disconsolate, crestfallen, disappointed, dismayed, daunted, discouraged, unmanned, unnerved, crushed, humbled, cowed, subdued, sapped, drained, shaken, thrown, undermined, devitalized, fed up, brassed off, cheesed off, pissed off,
Opposite: encourage, hearten,
• corrupt the morals of (someone).
• "she hastened her daughter's steps, lest she be demoralized by beholding the free manners of these ‘mad English’"
Origin: late 18th century: from French démoraliser (a word of the French Revolution), from dé- (expressing reversal) + moral ‘moral’, from Latin moralis .


2025 WordDisk