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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
humiliate
verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
a humiliating defeat (=very embarrassing)
▪ They are still bitter about their humiliating defeat.
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
publicly
▪ In a choice between meekly obeying his commands and being publicly humiliated there really was no choice.
▪ He had been publicly humiliated by widespread accusations that supporters had rigged the results of the poll to secure him a seat.
so
▪ I've never been so humiliated in my entire life, and all because of you!
▪ Why do we have to be so humiliated by officialdom?
▪ Wasn't it enough that he had been so humiliated?
▪ I have never been so humiliated in all my life.
▪ She had never, she said, been so humiliated in her life.
■ VERB
feel
▪ He felt shamed and humiliated by the officious treatment he received at the hands of the pompous men at Immigration.
▪ Perhaps they wanted everything immediately, or perhaps they felt the need to humiliate Mr Gubbay.
▪ He felt humiliated and his anger grew.
▪ She felt stupid now, humiliated by her own behaviour.
▪ Then I felt embarrassed, humiliated.
▪ She mobilised all those who felt either humiliated by its paternalism or angry at its hypocrisy.
▪ He said that he had felt humiliated in front of his suite mates and in front of female students.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Lewis says her son was humiliated by his teacher in front of his fifth-grade class.
▪ The invading army took every opportunity to humiliate the local peasants.
▪ Why do you always have to humiliate me in front of your friends?
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ Grown men shouldn't humiliate themselves like this.
▪ She had heard of the most appalling things-kidnapped bride, imprisoned and humiliated bridegroom, Halloween destructions and practical jokes.
▪ They were strange men and women with peppermint breath and pictures of humiliated ancestors up on their walls.
▪ When confronted with the messiah being humiliated, tortured and killed, Peter refuses to listen.
▪ Who wants to talk things over after being physically subdued and humiliated?
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Humiliate

Humiliate \Hu*mil"i*ate\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Humiliated; p. pr. & vb. n. Humiliating.] [L. humiliatus, p. p. of humiliare. See Humble.] To reduce to a lower position in one's own eyes, or in the eyes of others; to cause a loss of pride or dignity; to humble; to mortify.

We stand humiliated rather than encouraged.
--M. Arnold.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
humiliate

1530s, perhaps a back-formation from humiliation. Related: Humiliated; humiliating; humiliatingly.

Wiktionary
humiliate

vb. (context transitive English) To injure a person's dignity and self-respect.

WordNet
humiliate

v. cause to feel shame; hurt the pride of; "He humiliated his colleague by criticising him in front of the boss" [syn: mortify, chagrin, humble, abase]

Usage examples of "humiliate".

I very much hope that you will regret yours, Mrs Mitchell, trying to humiliate my mother as a way to annoy me.

But on the day that you apostatized I would no longer continue my humiliating sacrifice.

But time was indeed running out, and they needed the assessor alive and humiliated, rather than dead and a victim.

It was humiliating to have to explain that she was allowed no money, but at least having to endure this attenuated her embarrassment over wearing so little.

He had been browbeaten and humiliated successively that morning by Colonel Cathcart, Colonel Korn and Corporal Whitcomb.

That Maxil is shepherded, disgraced, shamed, humiliated by a bullying byblow, while Fernan is feted and cozened?

From that point of view, Henrietta offered him nothing: it was no challenge to control her, she had nothing worth exploiting her for, and there was no satisfaction in 462 KEN FOLLETT humiliating someone as low down on the scale as a prostitute.

Miss Hamilton was completely silent, and to Martyn, humiliated and miserable, the necessary intimacies of her work were particularly mortifying.

When Teekleman hears it told he makes a great pretence of laughing and being seen to be a good fellow who can take a joke, but later relays the remark to Hinetitama who finds herself completely mortified and humiliated.

Seeing an adult humiliated like that mortified me so much that for a couple of weeks I walked three blocks to shop at a different cornerstore so as to avoid having to look Mr Kane in the face after having witnessed his humiliation.

Rather, as Pinkney and others have suggested, the crowd fought mainly because it hated the Bourbons and their associates, whom French nationalists linked to the humiliating defeat of 1814.

Even in the primaries he lost -- New Hampshire, Ohio, Pennsylvania -- he did well enough to embarrass the pollsters, humiliate the pols, and crank up his staff morale another few notches.

And it must be owned that if, in other circumstances, the species of courtesy rendered to the King of England by so many warriors, from whom he claimed no natural allegiance, had in it something that might have been thought humiliating, yet the nature and cause of the war was so fitted to his pre-eminently chivalrous character and renowned feats in arms, that claims which might elsewhere have been urged were there forgotten, and the brave did willing homage to the bravest, in an expedition where the most undaunted and energetic courage was necessary to success.

Humiliated, Routier had vowed in private circles to see Michael brought down, a threat at which Michael had laughed openly.

Zapruder, completely humiliated, turns to run, this will not work either, nothing will work and something must have happened to my timing, to my control of the instance because here is Scop, he is already at Dealey, bounding from the little hollow where he has hidden the converter, his face dull and murky with the effects of passage but the heaviness already beginning to lift as he sprints toward us.