"Deter Suppress Extract!: Royal Military Police Close Protection, The Authorised History"

The meaning of DETER is to turn aside, discourage, or prevent from acting. How to use deter in a sentence. The Fearful History of Deter
"Deter Suppress Extract!: Royal Military Police Close Protection, The Authorised History" 1

DETER definition: to discourage or restrain from acting or proceeding. See examples of deter used in a sentence.

DETER meaning: 1. to prevent someone from doing something or to make someone less enthusiastic about doing…. Learn more.

"Deter Suppress Extract!: Royal Military Police Close Protection, The Authorised History" 3

Define deter. deter synonyms, deter pronunciation, deter translation, English dictionary definition of deter. tr.v. de terred , de ter ring , de ters 1. To prevent or discourage from acting, as by means of fear or doubt: threats that did not deter her from speaking...

Deter means to discourage, or literally “to frighten away.” Halloween decorations that are too scary might deter trick-or-treaters, and the risk of being expelled deters kids from cheating in school.

Definition of deter verb in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

"Deter Suppress Extract!: Royal Military Police Close Protection, The Authorised History" 6

Deter definition: To prevent or discourage from acting, as by means of fear or doubt.

deter (third-person singular simple present deters, present participle deterring, simple past and past participle deterred) (transitive) To prevent something from happening. (transitive) To persuade someone not to do something; to discourage.

Definition of deter in the Definitions.net dictionary. Meaning of deter. What does deter mean? Information and translations of deter in the most comprehensive dictionary definitions resource on the web.

"Deter Suppress Extract!: Royal Military Police Close Protection, The Authorised History" 9

Extract forms a kind of mirror image of abstract: more common as a verb, but also used as a noun and adjective. The adjective, meaning “derived or descended,” is now obsolete, as is a sense of the noun that overlapped with abstract, “summary.”

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