Desecrative vs Desecrate - What's the difference?
desecrative | desecrate | Related terms |
(transitive) To profane or violate the sacredness or sanctity of something.
* 1916 — James Whitcomb Riley, The Complete Works of James Whitcomb Riley ,
(transitive) To remove the consecration from someone or something; to deconsecrate.
(transitive) To inappropriately change.
* 1913 — William Alexander Lambeth and Warren H. Manning,
* {{quote-book, year=1963, author=(Margery Allingham)
, title=(The China Governess)
, chapter=Foreword Desecrated.
*1842 , (Edgar Allan Poe), ‘The Myster of Marie Rogêt’:
*:Here are the very nooks where the unwashed most abound—here are the temples most desecrate .
Desecrative is a related term of desecrate.
desecrative
Not English
Desecrative has no English definition. It may be misspelled.English words similar to 'desecrative':
disaccharide, disagreeable, desacralize, desegregate, disaggregate, decigramme, decagramme, disagreeance, desoxyribose, disseizure, deoxycortonedesecrate
English
Verb
Volume 10.
- It's reform -- reform! You're going to 'turn over a new leaf,' and all that, and sign the pledge, and quit cigars, and go to work, and pay your debts, and gravitate back into Sunday-school, where you can make love to the preacher's daughter under the guise of religion, and desecrate the sanctity of the innermost pale of the church by confessions at Class of your 'thorough conversion'!
Thomas Jefferson as an Architect and a Designer of Landscapes.
- A subsequent owner has desecrated the main hall and robbed it of its grandeur by putting in a floor just beneath the circular windows in order to make an upper room over the hall.
citation, passage=Everything a living animal could do to destroy and to desecrate bed and walls had been done. […] A canister of flour from the kitchen had been thrown at the looking-glass and lay like trampled snow over the remains of a decent blue suit with the lining ripped out which lay on top of the ruin of a plastic wardrobe.}}