- Disvalue
- Disvalue Dis*val"ue (?; see {Dis-}), v. t. To undervalue; to depreciate. --Shak. [1913 Webster]
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English. 2000.
The Collaborative International Dictionary of English. 2000.
Disvalue — Dis*val ue, n. Disesteem; disregard. B. Jonson. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
disvalue — index denounce (condemn), deprecate, discommend, lessen Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
disvalue — [dis val′yo͞o] vt. disvalued, disvaluing to regard as of little or no value; depreciate n. negative value … English World dictionary
disvalue — I. dəs, (ˈ)dis+ transitive verb Etymology: dis (I) + value (v.) 1. archaic : undervalue, depreciate 2 … Useful english dictionary
disvalue — I. transitive verb Date: 1603 1. archaic undervalue, depreciate 2. to consider of little value II. noun Date: 1603 1. obsolete disregard, disesteem … New Collegiate Dictionary
disvalue — /dis val yooh/, n., v., disvalued, disvaluing. n. 1. disesteem; disparagement. v.t. 2. Archaic. to depreciate; disparage. [1595 1605; DIS 1 + VALUE] * * * … Universalium
disvalue — 1. verb To regard something as having little or no value 2. noun harm, demerit … Wiktionary
disvalue — The opposite of value: the amount of harm or demerit attaching to some outcome or action or character trait … Philosophy dictionary
disvalue — dis·value … English syllables
disvalue — dis•val•ue [[t]dɪsˈvæl yu[/t]] n. v. ued, u•ing 1) disesteem; disparagement 2) archaic to depreciate; disparage • Etymology: 1595–1605 … From formal English to slang