| 释义 | 
		Definition of debased in English: debasedadjective dɪˈbeɪst Reduced in quality or value.  the debased traditions of sportsmanship Example sentencesExamples -  It really has become an increasingly debased process of making art.
 -  In short, preemption is now a politicized, debased word.
 -  The rhetoric of movie reviews is a debased currency.
 -  Only the debased American media could uncritically repeat such outrageous claims.
 -  For many in the new generation it has become a debased form of personal power seeking.
 -  What had once been high art, fashioned by the Romans or Michelangelo, has become debased, mass-culture kitsch.
 -  Even in the long debased hyperbole of historic moments in the Northern Ireland peace process, this was a monumental announcement.
 -  For it threatens freedom in the name of the most debased conception of democracy.
 -  No doubt, compared with today's generally debased television fare, the live dramas of the 1950s may seem an idyllic era.
 -  This is Hindi cinema at its most debased, debauch, dreadful.
 -  Concepts highly prized by Puritans still exist in debased form in American mass culture.
 -  They came from all directions, travelling on roads known only to a few mad or debased souls.
 -  On stage, he becomes an archetypal embodiment of the debased American dream.
 -  The sacrality of work persists, albeit in a rather debased form, in the idea of the hobby.
 -  Economic transactions would then be conducted through barter rather than via the medium of a debased script.
 -  It could be the ultimate alchemy, at least in the debased sense of transmuting the elements.
 -  It was fairly easy for laymen to distinguish debased coins from sound coins.
 -  This disgusting spectacle provides a revealing insight into the debased nature of what passes for political discussion in Britain today.
 -  The letter testifies to the debased level of what passes for intellectual life in the United States.
 -  No one could have predicted how debased higher education would become.
 
    Definition of debased in US English: debasedadjective Reduced in quality or value.  the debased traditions of sportsmanship Example sentencesExamples -  For many in the new generation it has become a debased form of personal power seeking.
 -  The rhetoric of movie reviews is a debased currency.
 -  This disgusting spectacle provides a revealing insight into the debased nature of what passes for political discussion in Britain today.
 -  No doubt, compared with today's generally debased television fare, the live dramas of the 1950s may seem an idyllic era.
 -  The letter testifies to the debased level of what passes for intellectual life in the United States.
 -  What had once been high art, fashioned by the Romans or Michelangelo, has become debased, mass-culture kitsch.
 -  It was fairly easy for laymen to distinguish debased coins from sound coins.
 -  Even in the long debased hyperbole of historic moments in the Northern Ireland peace process, this was a monumental announcement.
 -  They came from all directions, travelling on roads known only to a few mad or debased souls.
 -  It really has become an increasingly debased process of making art.
 -  For it threatens freedom in the name of the most debased conception of democracy.
 -  The sacrality of work persists, albeit in a rather debased form, in the idea of the hobby.
 -  In short, preemption is now a politicized, debased word.
 -  It could be the ultimate alchemy, at least in the debased sense of transmuting the elements.
 -  No one could have predicted how debased higher education would become.
 -  Economic transactions would then be conducted through barter rather than via the medium of a debased script.
 -  Concepts highly prized by Puritans still exist in debased form in American mass culture.
 -  This is Hindi cinema at its most debased, debauch, dreadful.
 -  On stage, he becomes an archetypal embodiment of the debased American dream.
 -  Only the debased American media could uncritically repeat such outrageous claims.
 
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