DISMAY vs DEPRESS: NOUN
- Sudden or complete loss of courage; despairing fear or apprehension; discouraged or terrified amazement; utter disheartenment.
- Ruin; defeat; destruction.
- A sudden or complete loss of courage in the face of trouble or danger.
- Fear resulting from the awareness of danger
- Loss of courage and firmness through fear; overwhelming and disabling terror; a sinking of the spirits; consternation.
- Condition fitted to dismay; ruin.
- Synonyms Apprehension, Fright, etc. (see alarm); discouragement.
- The feeling of despair in the face of obstacles
- N/A
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: ADJECTIVE
- N/A
- Having the middle lower than the border; concave.
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: VERB
- Lower someone's spirits; make downhearted
- Fill with apprehension or alarm; cause to be unpleasantly surprised
- To make depressed, sad or bored.
- To press down on
- Cause to drop or sink
- Lessen the activity or force of
- Lower someone's spirits; make downhearted
- Lower (prices or markets)
- Press down
- To cause a depression or a decrease in parts of the economy.
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To take dismay or fright; to be filled with dismay.
- N/A
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To disable with alarm or apprehensions; to depress the spirits or courage of; to deprive or firmness and energy through fear; to daunt; to appall; to terrify.
- To render lifeless; to subdue; to disquiet.
- To upset or distress.
- To cause to lose enthusiasm or resolution; disillusion or discourage: : discourage.
- To reduce (an equation) in a lower degree.
- To lessen in price; to cause to decline in value; to cheapen; to depreciate.
- To lessen the activity of; to make dull; embarrass, as trade, commerce, etc.
- To cast a gloom upon; to sadden.
- To bring down or humble; to abase, as pride.
- To press down; to cause to sink; to let fall; to lower
- To lower prices in (a financial market).
- To lessen the activity or force of; weaken.
- To press down.
- To cause to drop or sink; lower.
- To lower in spirits; deject.
- To cause the sidereal pole to appear lower or nearer the horizon, as by sailing toward the equator.
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Make downhearted
- Lower someone's spirits
- Fill with apprehension or alarm
- To defeat by sudden onslaught; put to rout.
- To disquiet; trouble: usually reflexive.
- Synonyms To appal, daunt, dispirit, deject, frighten, paralyse, demoralize.
- To be daunted; stand aghast with fear; be confounded with terror.
- To break down the courage of, as by sudden danger or insuperable difficulty; overcome with fear of impending calamity or failure; fill with despairing apprehension; utterly dishearten: usually in the past participle.
- Pressed down; hollow in the center; concave.
- To press or move downward; make lower; bring to a lower level: as, to depress the muzzle of a gun; to depress the eye.
- To force or keep down; cause to fall to or remain in a low or lower condition; lower in vigor, amount, estimation, etc.: as, to depress stocks or the price of merchandise; business is depressed.
- To weigh upon; lower in feeling; make dull or languid; deject.
- To depreciate; rate meanly; belittle.
- To repress.
- In algebra, to reduce to a lower degree, as an equation.
- To reduce to subjection; overpower.
- To cast down, discourage, dishearten, dispirit, chill, dampen.
- Make downhearted
- Lower someone's spirits
- To pardon; release; let go.
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: RELATED WORDS
- Chagrin, Astonishment, Deject, Cast down, Get down, Demoralize, Depress, Dispirit, Discouragement, Disheartenment, Alarm, Appall, Appal, Horrify, Consternation
- Tighten, Dishearten, Push, Suppress, Decline, Reduce, Diminish, Deject, Press down, Cast down, Get down, Dismay, Lower, Dispirit, Demoralize
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Frustration, Indignation, Bewilderment, Disgust, Amazement, Astonishment, Deject, Demoralize, Depress, Dispirit, Discouragement, Alarm, Appal, Horrify, Consternation
- Curb, Decrease, Tighten, Dishearten, Push, Suppress, Decline, Reduce, Diminish, Press down, Deject, Dismay, Lower, Dispirit, Demoralize
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- To my dismay I got the corporate BS!
- To my dismay, that did not faze him.
- Job culture is one of gloom and dismay.
- Swallowing his dismay, he managed to find words.
- With growing dismay he listened to their story.
- Much to the dismay of anti virus companies.
- Yet fairdy well he did them all dismay.
- But, to my dismay, that did not happen.
- This truth should neither discourage nor dismay us.
- What she saw made her shudder with dismay.
- And all the evening did was depress Francesca.
- The biggest predictor of Vicodin taken, depress respiration.
- WHY I HAVE TO DEPRESS MYSELF FOR IT?
- Fully depress the accelerator pedal andhold it there.
- Depress the left mouse button and hold it.
- Method depress, socl so must posted dvdul dults.
- But our purpose is not to depress everyone.
- The internal intercostals depress the ribs, and the abdominal muscles depress the lower ribs and pull the abdominal wall inward.
- For example, herbivores depress plants; predators depress herbivores; predators thus indirectly facilitate plants through their cascading effects.
- Depress the Ready Buttonrequirements and then depress the mode button to selecteethe Laserwater to prevent combustion.
DISMAY vs DEPRESS: QUESTIONS
- Who sings Gospel of dismay in Bendy and the Ink Machine?
- What did Jurgis hear Queen Elizabeth give an exclamation of dismay?
- What are the signs of disarray and dismay in America?
- How do you depress the accelerator pedal on a Honda Accord?
- Is it possible to express and depress at the same time?
- What happens if you depress the clutch pedal too hard?
- How do you depress the plunger on a Brownells 1911?
- Do you press or depress the button on some cameras?
- Is Charles Dickens trying to depress US with London Fog?
- What depresses Gatsby and how does this depress him?
- What happens if the equalizer tube does not depress?
- Do mistiness and unstructured openness depress or enhance preference?
- How can a strong exchange rate depress economic growth?