English-Wörter für 'Alternative spelling of pauperize.'
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Suchergebnisse
verb
adj
- Deficient in a specified way.
- With no or few possessions or money, particularly in relation to contemporaries who do have them.
- Inadequate, insufficient.
- Of low quality.
- Free from self-assertion; not proud or arrogant; meek.
- (attributive only) Worthy of pity.
- having little money or few possessions
- lacking in quality or substances
- of insufficient quantity to meet a need
- deserving or inciting pity
- characterized by or indicating poverty
noun
verb
- (transitive) To make (a place or thing) trashy or low-class.
- (informal, transitive) To criticize a person in a ranting way or manner.
- (transitive) To remove trash and other items from an abandoned house.
- Misspelling of thrash out.
- (transitive) To ruin (a place) with vandalism, garbage, etc.
- (informal, intransitive) To stop working; to crap out.
- (transitive) To insult, demean and criticize (someone).
verb
- (transitive, slang, vulgar, derogatory) To produce (something of very inferior quality).
- (transitive, slang, vulgar) To produce by shitting (i.e. defecating).
- (transitive, slang, vulgar, derogatory) To give birth.
- (intransitive, slang, vulgar) To flee in a cowardly manner.
- (intransitive, slang, vulgar) To stop functioning, usually suddenly and catastrophically.
noun
- Alternative spelling of depersonalization.
- (existentialism) a loss of personal identity; a feeling of being an anonymous cog in an impersonal social machine
- emotional dissociative disorder in which there is loss of contact with your own personal reality accompanied by feelings of unreality and strangeness
- representing a human being as a physical thing deprived of personal qualities or individuality
verb
- (intransitive, dialectal) To pretend poverty.
- (intransitive, dialectal) To grumble secretly.
- (Ireland, Wales, ambitransitive) To be absent from (school) without a valid excuse; to play truant, to skive off.
- (intransitive, dialectal) To shrink or retire from view; lurk out of sight; skulk.
- (transitive, dialectal) To pilfer; filch; steal.
noun
- Alternative spelling of depersonalization.
- (existentialism) a loss of personal identity; a feeling of being an anonymous cog in an impersonal social machine
- emotional dissociative disorder in which there is loss of contact with your own personal reality accompanied by feelings of unreality and strangeness
- representing a human being as a physical thing deprived of personal qualities or individuality
verb
adj
- Deficient in a specified way.
- With no or few possessions or money, particularly in relation to contemporaries who do have them.
- Inadequate, insufficient.
- Of low quality.
- Free from self-assertion; not proud or arrogant; meek.
- (attributive only) Worthy of pity.
- having little money or few possessions
- lacking in quality or substances
- of insufficient quantity to meet a need
- deserving or inciting pity
- characterized by or indicating poverty
noun
verb
- (transitive) To make (a place or thing) trashy or low-class.
- (informal, transitive) To criticize a person in a ranting way or manner.
- (transitive) To remove trash and other items from an abandoned house.
- Misspelling of thrash out.
- (transitive) To ruin (a place) with vandalism, garbage, etc.
- (informal, intransitive) To stop working; to crap out.
- (transitive) To insult, demean and criticize (someone).
verb
- (transitive, slang, vulgar, derogatory) To produce (something of very inferior quality).
- (transitive, slang, vulgar) To produce by shitting (i.e. defecating).
- (transitive, slang, vulgar, derogatory) To give birth.
- (intransitive, slang, vulgar) To flee in a cowardly manner.
- (intransitive, slang, vulgar) To stop functioning, usually suddenly and catastrophically.
verb
- (intransitive, dialectal) To pretend poverty.
- (intransitive, dialectal) To grumble secretly.
- (Ireland, Wales, ambitransitive) To be absent from (school) without a valid excuse; to play truant, to skive off.
- (intransitive, dialectal) To shrink or retire from view; lurk out of sight; skulk.
- (transitive, dialectal) To pilfer; filch; steal.