disencourage

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

From dis- +‎ encourage.

Verb[edit]

disencourage (third-person singular simple present disencourages, present participle disencouraging, simple past and past participle disencouraged)

  1. (now regional or nonstandard) To discourage.
    • 1800, Frances Burney, Diaries and Letters:
      The world has acknowledged you my offspring, and I will disencourage you no more.
    • 1937, Zora Neale Hurston, Their Eyes Were Watching God, Amistad, published 2013, page 63:
      “They say things sometimes that tickles me nearly tuh death, but Ah won't laugh jus' tuh dis-incourage 'em.”