Meaning of deplumation | Babel Free
/ˌdiːpluːˈmeɪʃən/Definitions
-
The stripping or falling off of plumes or feathers. uncountable
-
Loss of the eyelashes due to disease of the eyelids. uncountable
-
The stripping of someone's symbol(s) of status and prestige; humiliation. figuratively, uncountable
Examples
“[…] through the violence of her moulting, or deplumation, she comes into this earthly body deprived of that blessed life which she before enjoyed.”
“Systemic symptoms include headache, anorexia and sometimes nausea, vomiting, tinnitus and deafness, and deplumation or bleaching of the hair may occur.”
“I hope now the violence both of his tartian [=tertian] ague & feaver & the deplun [=deplumation], which has been so troublesome in his eyes as since his last writing to your worships to quite deprive him of his sight, is gone of”
“Little did anyone expect that five decades after the company's launch, their research into deplumation would pan-out in a most unusual way — designer eyelashes.”
“If any person wishes to see one of the most neat, elegant, and at the same time thorough cases of deplumation, any where to be found in literary history, in which an individual who strutted on to the stage as a peacock, was soon obliged to leave it as a dove, he has only to read Dr. Beck's articles in "The Literary World," in which the fabricated quotation of Mr. Webster, and Professor Felton's defence of it, are shown to be exceedingly bad as Latin, and much worse as logic.”
“If the humiliation and baseness of such an acquiescence would not have revolted the self-love and pride of a man like Sir Philip Francis, at any rate he was not a fool, and the mere risk of detection and deplumation, which might have happened any day, would have prevented him from enduring his false feathers.”
“Occasionally a Chinese or two would be detected bringing this liquor to the joss-house for sale, and whenever the guilt of a culprit was established, the invariable punishment was a smart bambooing and loss of tail; nothing earthly is so humiliating to a Chinaman as the deplumation of his queue, an ornament to him of great personal pride and care , and the longer and thicker the queue is, so much the more is he admired and envied.”
“From his headquarters in Minnesota and anxious to regain lost ground after his deplumation the summer before, General Terry proclaimed Gibbon's effort a "brilliant success."”
CEFR level
C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.