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View definitions for dispirit

dispirit

verb as in depress

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Example Sentences

Through its willingness to smash the rules, both written and unwritten, the Republican Party has managed to dispirit better than half the electorate.

That this foundational principle could be overlooked in the name of icons seemed to exhaust and dispirit her.

Part of the issue is that Texas leaves much of the administration of elections to local governments, creating dispirit systems across the state’s 254 counties.

Mr. Levin, who has a Sunday evening Fox News show in addition to his daily radio show, said this week that Democrats and the mainstream media had created an “unreality” that was designed to “humiliate the president, to try and dispirit you, and to drag down his poll numbers and defeat him.”

“Trump’s declining electoral fortunes in California could dispirit Republican voters here, reducing GOP turnout in next year’s primary and general elections. This could spell trouble for Republican candidates running in competitive elections for Congress, Assembly and state Senate,” DiCamillo said.

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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