Apedia

Demote Verb De Promote  To Lower Position Noun

Title demote
Text
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary
de·mote

 \\di-ˈmōt, ˌdē-\\ transitive verb 
(de·mot·ed ; de·mot·ing)
 ETYMOLOGY  de- + -mote (as in promote)
 DATE  circa 1891
1. to reduce to a lower grade or rank
2. to relegate to a less important position
• de·mo·tion 
 \\-ˈmō-shən\\ noun
English Etymology
demote
  1893, Amer.Eng. coinage from de- + (pro)mote. The original reference describes it as "used generally in that section of the country" (Iowa, U.S.A.), which implies an earlier date. Related: Demotion (1901).
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary-牛津双解-OALD7
demote
de·mote 7di:5mEutNAmE -5mout / verb[VN]
   [often passive] ~ sb (from sth) (to sth) to move sb to a lower position or rank, often as a punishment
   使降级,使降职,使降低地位(常作为惩罚)
   OPP  
promote
 
 de·mo·tion 7di:5mEuFnNAmE -5mou- / noun [C, U] 
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Thesaurus-11th Edition
v. Function: verb 

Synonyms: 
DEGRADE
 1, break, bump, bust, declass, demerit, disgrade, disrate, downgrade, reduce 
Related Words: demean, lower 
Antonyms: promote
Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged
de·mote
\də̇, dē+ˈmōt, usu -ōd.+V\ transitive verb
(-ed/-ing/-s)
Etymology: de- + -mote (as in promote)
: to reduce to a lower grade or rank
 demote a pupil >
 < a soldier demoted from sergeant to corporal >
: relegate to a subordinate or less important position — opposed to promote
• de·mo·tion \-ōshən\ noun -s

Learn with these flashcards. Click next, previous, or up to navigate to more flashcards for this subject.

Next card:  the common people demos de·mos noun  greek  at 

Previous card: Denial  refusal reality  of words noun  a problem

Up to card list: English learning