devaluing 的 2 个定义
de·val·ued, de·val·u·ing.
de·val·ued, de·val·u·ing.
- to undergo devaluation: The currency has devalued at a rapid rate.
devaluing 近义词
depreciate
更多devaluing例句
- Instead of rebuilding a new economy after the Civil War, the South simply devalued the labor previously performed by enslaved people, whether in the fields or within the home.
- The flip side is that our regular season would have been devalued if our teams didn’t have to compete.
- They’re also the back-of-house positions most likely to be held by women, whose work is often devalued by male chefs.
- Swift promised she would rerecord all of her older albums so she would fully own them, therefore devaluing Braun’s purchase.
- To understand the way that we have devalued women’s work is really to understand that we’ve expected women to do so much for free over hundreds and hundreds of years.
- Boys are taught early in life to devalue care, to be hyper-competitive, super-achieving men.
- In its place came something which, striving to fuse Urdu and Telugu, seemed to devalue both.
- Rosen undoubtedly did not intend to devalue women with her comments.
- We devalue the significance of memory in order to cope with the fact that our gadgets are now better at it than we are.
- They propose that we pressure China to improve its human-rights policy, or to get tougher on Iran, or to devalue its currency.
- These people devalue the source of their frustration and envy.
- If they really decide to devalue, then Whitely and me, we go ahead and put every cent we got into Swiss gold.