demoralize

حوصلے پست
definition
verb
their rejection of the treaty has demoralized the diplomatic community
cause (someone) to lose confidence or hope; dispirit.
It is a perceptive account of life in an occupied city, in which victors and vanquished alike are corrupted and demoralized .
corrupt the morals of (someone).
example
Each attack is designed to 'demoralize' our people and divide us from one another.
It is you and the like of you that deprave and 'demoralize' youth and prepare criminals for the gallows.
They are helping our enemies to 'demoralize' us into giving up.
The poor areas may have generated more crime and disorder as a consequence of anonymity, 'demoralization' and despair.
‘I thought I would find a company that had 'demoralised' employees, low morale,’ he said.
And so I think they'll come to the realization that as difficult as our political compromise is, as tough as it is to work it out, it is much better than the continuation of this grinding, dehumanizing, 'demoralizing' conflict.
These unhealthy developments have led to thorough 'demoralization' in the bureaucracy, rampant indiscipline and all round inefficiency.
Much of the work needs effort to get started and can be 'demoralisingly' difficult to complete.
And it just 'demoralised' me totally when he would speak to me that way because I decided that I was doing everything in my power that I could to do what he wanted.
Another warden said: ‘The re-training will be pointless because the staff are all 'demoralised' .’
The long-term economic woes have begun to have a 'demoralizing' effect on the country as a whole.
When he awoke and made the final preparations on his pack, Aaron further discovered that with sleeping bag, roll, and tent, his pack was 'demoralizingly' heavy and probably structurally unsound.
The mile-markers passed one by one at 'demoralisingly' infrequent intervals to anyone accustomed to training in kilometres.
The principal of a south Armagh primary school broken into over the weekend says he is 'demoralised' by the destruction left by the thieves.
Grimy wards, with paint peeling, dust gathering on windowsills and numerous unidentified stains, frighten patients and 'demoralise' staff.
It is a perceptive account of life in an occupied city, in which victors and vanquished alike are corrupted and 'demoralized' .
This criticism was said to have 'demoralised' staff and caused a split between them and councillors.
Alcohol as a destructive force in Apache culture is a phenomenon that dates from colonization, and it has been a byproduct of 'demoralization' and despair.
Staff are 'demoralised' , not least because local councils have eroded library opening hours and consequently cut shift allowances.
The aide admitted that the news of the killing was withheld to avoid 'demoralising' the fighters.
When confronted with a lethal and determined enemy, one has a responsibility to give short shrift to 'demoralizing' and sinister nonsense.
But, privately, he confided to friends that he was 'demoralized' , even tempted to quit.
Groups used violence for political or ideological ends, as a means of 'demoralising' their opponents, winning concessions or taking over territory.
This is not just 'demoralization' ; this is a clinical depression.
‘You're not far now,’ she deadpanned, setting me up for a 'demoralizing' final 3.8 miles.
I want to believe that the conclusions this woman reaches about her son's future are untrue, filtered through that terrible 'demoralization' .
The parents and the teachers tend to compare their wards with their counterparts and as a result the child is 'demoralised' in front of others.
Instead of 'demoralizing' a people, you have brought them closer together.
‘People are very 'demoralized' and unhappy,’ a former administration official said.
But at just 39 years old the family doctor is so 'demoralised' with his inability to care for his patients properly that he is leaving the profession altogether.
Credits: Google Translate