To accept no longer in a community, group or country, e.g. by official decree.
Refer to another person for decision or judgment.
Assign to a lower position; reduce in rank.
Assign to a class or kind.
1 We still relegate women's work to the domestic, the interior, the personal.
2 Burnham's plan would again relegate clinicians to the back benches of commissioning.
3 Breaking: Dundee relegate rivals Dundee United -boyhood fan side-footshome last-minutewinner.
4 To begin with, we must relegate selection to its proper place.
5 He decided to relegate it into the category of unimportant events.
6 On the other hand, we shall not relegate the old to an almshouse.
7 I must relegate her to the fog she came out of.
8 I helped to relegate Sunderland when I was a City player.
9 Saturation coverage of the Clintons' itinerary would surely relegate developments at Dublin Castle.
10 Now we relegate knee-breeches to fancy dress balls and Court functions.
11 Our economic conditions still relegate many men to a servile status.
12 Meanwhile, read this-agreeingto relegate discussion of it to a less hungry season.
13 CGI - that relegate some of the Max Rebo Band members to near-obscurity.
14 He insists on doing himself what another director would relegate to a second unit.
15 Rigorists, and devotees of antiquity, relegate the perfect fourth to the list of dissonances.
16 New York does not even relegate this emblem to the top of the column.
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Об этом термине relegate
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Translations for relegate