different between disorientate vs disoriented

disorientate

English

Etymology

Back-formation from disorientation.

Verb

disorientate (third-person singular simple present disorientates, present participle disorientating, simple past and past participle disorientated)

  1. Alternative form of disorient
    • 1941, Frederic William Eggleston, Search for a Social Philosophy, p254
      Ideas often disorientate a system which has been formed on a particular pattern and make it inapplicable; so ideas may lead to the readjustment of groups and sometimes of political boundaries.

Related terms

  • disorientation

Translations


Italian

Verb

disorientate

  1. second-person plural present indicative of disorientare
  2. second-person plural imperative of disorientare
  3. feminine plural of disorientato

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disoriented

English

Etymology

dis- +? oriented or disorient +? -ed

Pronunciation

Verb

disoriented

  1. simple past tense and past participle of disorient

Adjective

disoriented (comparative more disoriented, superlative most disoriented)

  1. Having lost one's direction; confused.

Translations

See also

  • disorientate
  • nonoriented
  • unoriented

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