deteriorate
verb/dɪˈtɪə.ɹɪə.ɹeɪt/UK/dɪˈtɪɹ.iə.ɹeɪt/US
Etymology
Learned borrowing from Late Latin dēteriorātus, perfect passive participle of Late Latin dēteriorō (see -ate (verb-forming suffix)), further from Latin dēterior (“worse”). Cognate with French détériorer.
- derived from dēteriorō
- learned borrowing from dēteriorātus
Definitions
To make worse
To make worse; to make inferior in quality or value; to impair.
- to deteriorate the mind
- The art of war, like every other art, ecclesiastical architecture alone excepted, was greatly deteriorated during those years of general degradation[…]
To grow worse
To grow worse; to be impaired in quality; to degenerate.
- During this fine run through Fife the weather had deteriorated rapidly, and as we passed Wormit and came onto the Tay Bridge heavy rain clouds were piled over the sea.
- The condition of the tunnel continued to deteriorate, aggravated by the vibration from the heavy traffic, and stories of trains emerging with dislodged bricks on their roofs are probably not exaggerated.
- It was turning into an abysmal afternoon for Newcastle and it deteriorated further when Tiote saw red for his challenge on Jon Ashton.
The neighborhood
- synonymworsen
- synonymto go off
- synonymnerf
- synonymdegenerate
- synonymweaken
- antonymameliorate
- antonymbetter
- antonymimprove
- antonymrevamp
- neighbordeterioration
- neighbordeteriorative
- neighbordeteriorable
Derived
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for deteriorate. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA