Found 4 hits - Term: detract, Database: *, Strategy: exact
- [1] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
detract \detract"\, v. i.
to take away a part or something, especially from one's
credit; to lessen reputation; to derogate; to defame; --
often with from.
1913 webster
it has been the fashion to detract both from the moral
and literary character of cicero. --v. knox.
1913 webster
- [2] : The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
detract \detract"\, v. t. imp. p. p. detracted; p. pr.
vb. n. detracting. l. detractus, p. p. of detrahere to
detract; de + trahere to draw: cf. f. d'etracter. see
trace.
1. to take away; to withdraw.
1913 webster
detract much from the view of the without. --sir h.
wotton.
1913 webster
2. to take credit or reputation from; to defame.
1913 webster
that calumnious critic . . .
detracting what laboriously we do. --drayton.
syn: to derogate; decry; disparage; depreciate; asperse;
vilify; defame; traduce. see decry.
1913 webster
see also:
detracted detracting trace decry
- [3] : WordNet (r) 2.0
detract
v : take away a part from; diminish; "his bad manners detract
from his good character" syn: take away
see also:
take away
- [4] : Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
43 moby thesaurus words for "detract":
abate, abrade, abstract, bate, beguile, call away, curtail,
decrease, deduct, depreciate, derogate, detract attention,
detract from, diminish, disparage, distract, divert,
divert the mind, drain, eat away, erode, extract, file away,
impair, leach, lessen, purify, reduce, refine, remove, retrench,
rub away, shorten, subduct, subtract, take away, take away from,
take from, thin, thin out, wear away, weed, withdraw
Results 1 - 1 of 1 found about detract: Detract
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Detract, definition of term: Detract
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