trashify
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]trashify (third-person singular simple present trashifies, present participle trashifying, simple past and past participle trashified)
- (transitive, informal) To turn (something) into trash; to lower the quality of.
- 1964 March 14, J. Donald Backenstose, “This Week's Meditation…: On Having a High Regard for Yourself”, in Lebanon Daily News, volume 92, number 161, Lebanon, Pa., page 4:
- Today many people are cheapening themselves, devaluating their lives, trashifying their characters. They have strayed from and lost the high regard for themselves.
- 1999, James H. Boren, How to be a Sincere Phoney: A Handbook for Politicians and Bureaucrats, Tahlequah, OK, Delaplane, VA: Birdcage Publications; EPM Custom Books, →ISBN, page 171:
- Trashify all reports with irrelevant data, maps, charts, and computer readouts.
- 2000 December 31, Jim Hendrickson, “What the F#$@ is wrong with Netscape?”, in alt.html[1] (Usenet):
- Same with font-sizes, have to bump it up a point or 2 because Netscape 4 displays it smaller than the rest of the browsers, so to get it to look "acceptable" in that 13%, you have to trashify the remaining 87% by placing bloated, non-compliant code which makes performance much worse.