Corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality.
Lower someone's spirits; make downhearted.
1 It believes a full apology would demoralise its citizens and project weakness.
2 Too much politics in our food threatened to demoralise our large cities.
3 Analysts said the move could demoralise the remaining cadres of ULFA.
4 Two or three executions of this kind usually sufficed to demoralise the enemy.
5 It hadn't struck me before, but it is a fact; I do demoralise children.
6 But this pay had already begun to demoralise the receivers.
7 He must maintain the dignity of his office, in order not to demoralise the world.
8 The police operation at Orgreave was meticulously planned to intimidate, oppress and demoralise the miners.
9 Analysts say both sides regularly inflate casualty numbers to maintain public support and demoralise opposition fighters.
10 They will commonly demoralise and disorganise the business conduct of an affair in about a fortnight.
11 This pension reform should be seen as the ultimate weapon to split and demoralise his political opponents.
12 The use of strategic bomb attacks to demoralise and murder civilians was a new sort of atrocity.
13 He really did demoralise the Democratic party.
14 One whose loss would demoralise team-mates to such an extent that it would almost derail their ambitions.
15 There were, he stated, two ways to demoralise and defeat the enemy: 'superior fire and irresistible forward movement.
16 He said Parad's death could demoralise Muslim rebels and derail plans to create trouble during elections this year.
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Об этом термине demoralise
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