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    de·ject
    /dəˈjekt/

    verb

    • 1. make sad or dispirited; depress: archaic "nothing dejects a trader like the interruption of his profits"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Deject is an adjective meaning gloomy or depressed, or a verb meaning to make gloomy. Learn the synonyms, examples, word history, and etymology of deject from Merriam-Webster dictionary.

  3. To deject is to make someone feel really, really sad. Few things will deject you more than losing your very favorite scarf — the one your grandmother knit — on the subway.

  4. Deject means to cast down in spirit or to be downcast. It can be used as a verb or an adjective. See the word origin, frequency, pronunciation, and usage examples from Collins English Dictionary.

  5. Deject definition: to depress the spirits of; dispirit; dishearten. See examples of DEJECT used in a sentence.

  6. Deject means to lower the spirits of or dishearten someone. Find the origin, pronunciation, and translations of deject in different languages, as well as synonyms and related words.

  7. Deject is a verb that means to cast down in spirit or dishearten. It can also be an adjective that describes someone who is sad or dispirited. See synonyms, origin and examples of deject.

  8. Jun 2, 2024 · deject is a verb meaning to make sad or dispirited, or a noun meaning a lowly or abject person or a waste product. It comes from Old French dejeter, from Latin deicere (“to throw down”).

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