different between mortify vs stupify

mortify

English

Etymology

From Anglo-Norman mortifier, Middle French mortifier, from Late Latin mortific? (cause death), from Latin mors (death) + -fic? (-fy).

Pronunciation

  • (UK) IPA(key): /?m??t?fa?/
  • (US) IPA(key): /?m??t?fa?/

Verb

mortify (third-person singular simple present mortifies, present participle mortifying, simple past and past participle mortified)

  1. (transitive) To discipline (one's body, appetites etc.) by suppressing desires; to practise abstinence on. [from 15th c.]
    Some people seek sainthood by mortifying the body.
    • 1767, Walter Harte, Eulogius: Or, The Charitable Mason
      With fasting mortify'd, worn out with tears.
    • 1688, Matthew Prior, An Ode
      Mortify thy learned lust.
    • Mortify, therefore, your members which are upon the earth.
  2. (transitive, usually used passively) To embarrass, to humiliate. To injure one's dignity. [from 17th c.]
    I was so mortified I could have died right there; instead I fainted, but I swore I'd never let that happen to me again.
  3. (obsolete, transitive) To kill. [14th–17th c.]
  4. (obsolete, transitive) To reduce the potency of; to nullify; to deaden, neutralize. [14th–18th c.]
    • 1627, George Hakewill, Apologie [] of the Power and Providence of God
      He [] mortified them [pearls] in vineger aud drunke them vp
  5. (obsolete, transitive) To kill off (living tissue etc.); to make necrotic. [15th–18th c.]
  6. (obsolete, transitive) To affect with vexation, chagrin, or humiliation; to humble; to depress.
    • 22 September 1651 (date in diary), 1818 (first published), John Evelyn, John Evelyn's Diary
      the news of the fatal battle of Worcester, which exceedingly mortified our expectations
    • How often is [the ambitious man] mortified with the very praises he receives, if they do not rise so high as he thinks they ought!
  7. (transitive, Scotland, law, historical) To grant in mortmain.
    • 1876 James Grant, History of the Burgh and Parish Schools of Scotland, Part II, Chapter 14, p.453 (PDF 2.7 MB):
      the schoolmasters of Ayr were paid out of the mills mortified by Queen Mary
  8. (intransitive) To lose vitality.
  9. (intransitive) To gangrene.
  10. (intransitive) To be subdued.

Synonyms

  • (to discipline oneself by suppressing desires): macerate
  • (to injure one's dignity): demean, humiliate, shame

Antonyms

  • (to injure one's dignity): dignify, honor

Related terms

  • mortification

Translations

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stupify

English

Verb

stupify (third-person singular simple present stupifies, present participle stupifying, simple past and past participle stupified)

  1. Alternative form of stupefy

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