Antonyms for de tracts


Grammar : Verb
Spell : dih-trakt
Phonetic Transcription : dɪˈtrækt


Definition of de tracts

Origin :
  • early 15c., from Middle French détracter, from Latin detractus, past participle of detrahere "to take down, pull down, disparage" (see detraction). Related: Detracted; detracting.
  • As in malign : verb slander, defame
  • As in mar : verb hurt, damage
  • As in minimize : verb make smaller; underrate
  • As in run down : verb ridicule
  • As in slander : verb make a scandalous remark
  • As in slur : verb insult
  • As in sneer : verb mock, condemn
  • As in subtract : verb take away
  • As in turn : verb reverse; change course
  • As in derogate : verb take away
  • As in scandalize : verb calumniate
  • As in asperse : verb libel
  • As in snigger : verb sneer
  • As in decry : verb criticize, blame
  • As in defame : verb inflict libel or slander
  • As in degrade : verb shame, humiliate
  • As in demean : verb humble, humiliate
  • As in deprecate : verb belittle, condemn
  • As in depreciate : verb belittle, ridicule
  • As in deride : verb make fun of; insult
  • As in detract : verb take away a part; lessen
  • As in disapprove : verb condemn
  • As in distract : verb divert attention; confuse
  • As in divert : verb take attention away

Synonyms for de tracts

Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019