depreciatory
— Adjective
– English
~ tending to decrease or cause a decrease in value; "a depreciating currency"; "depreciatory effects on prices"
depreciatory
— Adjective
– English
~ tending to diminish or disparage; "belittling comments"; "managed a deprecating smile at the compliment"; "deprecatory remarks about the book"; "a slighting remark"
depressant
— Adjective
– English
~ capable of depressing physiological or psychological activity or response by a chemical agent
depressed
— Adjective
– English
~ filled with melancholy and despondency; "gloomy at the thought of what he had to face"; "gloomy predictions"; "a gloomy silence"; "took a grim view of the economy"; "the darkening mood"; "lonely and blue in a strange city"; "depressed by the loss of his job"; "a dispirited and resigned expression on her face"; "downcast after his defeat"; "feeling discouraged and downhearted"
depressed
— Adjective
– English
~ lower than previously; "the market is depressed"; "prices are down"
depressed
— Adjective
– English
~ flattened downward as if pressed from above or flattened along the dorsal and ventral surfaces
depressing
— Adjective
– English
~ causing sad feelings of gloom and inadequacy; "the economic outlook is depressing"; "something cheerless about the room"; "a moody and uncheerful person"; "an uncheerful place"
deprived
— Adjective
– English
~ marked by deprivation especially of the necessities of life or healthful environmental influences; "a childhood that was unhappy and deprived, the family living off charity"; "boys from a deprived environment, wherein the family life revealed a pattern of neglect, moral degradation, and disregard for law"
derelict
— Adjective
– English
~ in deplorable condition; "a street of bedraggled tenements"; "a broken-down fence"; "a ramshackle old pier"; "a tumble-down shack"
derelict
— Adjective
– English
~ worn and broken down by hard use; "a creaky shack"; "a decrepit bus...its seats held together with friction tape"; "a flea-bitten sofa"; "a run-down neighborhood"; "a woebegone old shack"
derelict
— Adjective
– English
~ failing in what duty requires; "derelict (or delinquent) in his duty"; "neglectful of his duties"; "remiss of you not to pay your bills"
derelict
— Adjective
– English
~ forsaken by owner or inhabitants; "weed-grown yard of an abandoned farmhouse"
derisive
— Adjective
– English
~ abusing vocally; expressing contempt or ridicule; "derisive laughter"; "a jeering crowd"; "her mocking smile"; "taunting shouts of `coward' and `sissy'"
derisory
— Adjective
– English
~ so unreasonable as to invite derision; "the absurd excuse that the dog ate his homework"; "that's a cockeyed idea"; "ask a nonsensical question and get a nonsensical answer"; "a contribution so small as to be laughable"; "it is ludicrous to call a cottage a mansion"; "a preposterous attempt to turn back the pages of history"; "her conceited assumption of universal interest in her rather dull children was ridiculous"
derivable
— Adjective
– English
~ capable of being derived
derivational
— Adjective
– English
~ characterized by inflections indicating a semantic relation between a word and its base; "the morphological relation between `sing' and `singer' and `song' is derivational"
derivative
— Adjective
– English
~ resulting from or employing derivation; "a derivative process"; "a highly derivative prose style"
derived
— Adjective
– English
~ formed or developed from something else; not original; "the belief that classes and organizations are secondary and derived"- John Dewey
dermal
— Adjective
– English
~ of or relating to or located in the dermis