Debase in a sentence as a verb

Wah-wahThe rest of your post was really good, you don't need to debase it with that kind of pointless drivel.

Similar deal if we debase the currency with inflation.

Space travel captivates a lot of people on HN. That's just the nature of the community; it doesn't intend to debase the work of others.

Meaning that his words are likely to effect the debase of this issue going forward and should not, therefore, be lightly cast aside.

One party thought this to be an ordinary transaction; the other party knew it would debase the currency.

Looks an awful lot like a currency-war to me. Everyone is trying to debase their currency and export their way to prosperity.

As long as you stay in the MS wombYou don't need to debase an otherwise great conversation with incendiary language like that.

How do you expect to get sympathy for your position if you at the same time totally deadheartedly debase a group of people purely on their looks?

We today viewed that as extremely misguided, but at the time he and many others in power agreed that we should monitor and debase those "existential threads".

Are you really suggesting that its acceptable for us to debase one of the basic human rights that are the foundation of this country in order to capture one man?

I don't see why otherwise rational/scientific people feel the need to debase themselves by talking about edge-case individual examples when it comes to things like this.

Paper is very easy to debase, but if you want you can go to the "best" "schools" in the world and they can tell you why it's such a good idea... and maybe one day you can pick up a job at a central bank.

> Have people changed so much in the last 70-80 years that these songs—which seem expressly designed to debase their singers and deify their subjects—would be joyfully sung in harmony without complaint at company meetings?[...

It's just especially shitty and dehumanizing when you identify as something that is seen as culturally acceptable to debase.

Debase definitions

verb

corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality; "debauch the young people with wine and women"; "Socrates was accused of corrupting young men"; "Do school counselors subvert young children?"; "corrupt the morals"

verb

lower in value by increasing the base-metal content

See also: alloy

verb

corrupt, debase, or make impure by adding a foreign or inferior substance; often by replacing valuable ingredients with inferior ones; "adulterate liquor"

See also: load adulterate stretch dilute