DEMERIT


Meaning of DEMERIT in English

I. demerit noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English demerite, from Latin demeritum, from neuter of demeritus, past participle of demerēre to deserve, from de- + merēre to deserve — more at merit

obsolete : merit , desert ; also : a deserving or praiseworthy act

II. demerit transitive verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

1. obsolete : to be worthy of : deserve , merit

2. obsolete : to obtain by merit : earn

III. de·merit (ˈ)dē+ noun

( -s )

Etymology: Middle English, from Middle French demerite, from de- dis- + merite merit — more at merit

1. obsolete : an act that incurs blame or censure : offense — usually used in plural

2.

a. : a quality or characteristic that deserves blame : culpability

they see no merit or demerit in any man or any action — Edmund Burke

b. : lack or merit

it was not wholly from demerit , it was in part because of different merit, that he refused our exile — W.B.Yeats

3. : fault , defect , imperfection

it has the merit of quickness, but the demerits of inaccuracy, ambiguity, and slackness — F.C.Avis

if the work seems to have a conspicuous demerit at first hearing, it is the overindulgence of a passion for display work — Irving Kolodin

4. : a mark usually entailing a loss of privilege given to an offender by one in authority (as a teacher or an officer)

demerits for traffic violations

a demerit system designed to ensure discipline

5. Hinduism, Buddhism, & Jainism : the accrual of evil consequences that determine the number and forms of an individual's future earthly reincarnations : bad karma

IV. demerit verb

( -ed/-ing/-s )

transitive verb

1. obsolete : to divest of merit : disparage

2. archaic : to deserve not to have or to lose : fail to merit

3. : to lower (a person) in rank or status

an employee reprimanded or demerited for continued tardiness

intransitive verb

obsolete : to deserve or incur guilt or blame

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.