displace
English
Etymology
From Middle French desplacer (French: déplacer).
Pronunciation
Verb
displace (third-person singular simple present displaces, present participle displacing, simple past and past participle displaced)
- To put out of place; to disarrange.
- To move something, or someone, especially to forcibly move people from their homeland.
- To supplant, or take the place of something or someone; to substitute.
- To replace, on account of being superior to or more suitable than that which is being replaced.
- Electronic calculators soon displaced the older mechanical kind.
- 1950 January, Cecil J. Allen, “British Locomotive Practice and Performance”, in Railway Magazine, page 13:
- All have gone the same way, and since the war have displaced up-to-date steam power on all their principal services by the all-conquering diesel.
- (of a floating ship) To have a weight equal to that of the water displaced.
- (psychology) To repress.
Derived terms
Translations
to move something or someone
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to supplant, or take the place of something or someone; to substitute
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to have a weight equal to that of the water displaced
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Translations to be checked
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