dismalize

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English[edit]

Alternative forms[edit]

dismalise

Etymology[edit]

dismal +‎ -ize

Verb[edit]

dismalize (third-person singular simple present dismalizes, present participle dismalizing, simple past and past participle dismalized)

  1. To make dismal.
    • 1889, Lucy Larcom, A New England Girlhood: Outlined from Memory, page 213:
      And glancing through the pages of the “Lowell Offering” a year or two later, I see that I continued to dismalize myself at times, quite unnecessarily.
    • 1893, Margaret Sidney, Whittier with the Children, page 29:
      I remember he said to her, 'Why do young people like to dismalize themselves? Later in life we have no need to do that.'
    • 1942, Journal of Physical Education and Recreation - Volume 13, page 492:
      The greater are those human tensions which dismalize and disintegrate, the more important creative recreation becomes.
    • 1956, International Recreation Congress, Philadelphia, Proceedings - Volume 27, page 157:
      In the words of Dr. Irwin Edman in an article on "No Blackout for the Arts," appearing in a recent issue of RECREATION, we may "dismalize" and "demoralize" life in our pathetic eagerness to make first things first, if we do not recognize the "consolations and refreshment of the arts," and their "curative and energizing values."

Anagrams[edit]