devalorize

devalorize

(diːˈvæləˌraɪz) or

devalorise

vb (tr)
1. (Economics) a variant form of devalue
2. a variant form of devalue
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
Instead, Dihqan and Hillawi question, devalorize, and strip martyrdom down to its physical meaning: pain, violence, and death.
In the receiving countries of Europe, Canada, and the USA, it is a common practice on the part of employers and states alike to devalorize and invisibilize the work of migrants, whose underpaid work makes a significant contribution to the affluence of these societies.
In so doing, the excessive fetishization of the (fake) brand by inferior social groups devalorizes it in practice.
The claim that "feminization devalorizes" has several interactive dimensions.
If this strand of thought, which descends from Platonic idealism and combines with a transcendental dogmatics, devalorizes and condemns trust in what appears before the eyes, it is strange to note that it is precisely certain ascetic spiritual searches that rehabilitated sensory perception.
By doing this, urgency creates an arbitration which favours the present and devalorizes the future - now linked with a feeling of uncertainty; this condition creates a value-loaded estimate of the present as a force simply too weighty to allow us to consider the future.
Feminist criticism now provides further insights into the function of male discourse, of which the text in question is no doubt a prime example, and convincingly demonstrates how it silences and devalorizes the female characters.