Humiliate vs Deface - What's the difference?
humiliate | deface |
To injure a person's dignity and self-respect.
To damage something, especially a surface, in a visible or conspicuous manner.
* 1869:
To void or devalue; to nullify or degrade the face value.
* 1776:
(heraldry, flags) To alter a coat of arms or a flag by adding an element to it.
As verbs the difference between humiliate and deface
is that humiliate is to injure a person's dignity and self-respect while deface is to damage something, especially a surface, in a visible or conspicuous manner.humiliate
English
Verb
(humiliat)Synonyms
* debase * disgrace * humble * shame * See alsoExternal links
* * ----deface
English
Verb
(defac)- That wondrous frame where melody began / Lay as a tomb defaced that no eye cared to scan.
- He defaced the I.O.U. notes by scrawling "void" over them.
- One-and-twenty worn and defaced' shillings, however, were considered as equivalent to a guinea, which perhaps, indeed, was worn and ' defaced too, but seldom so much so.
- You get the Finnish state flag by defacing the national flag with the state coat of arms placed in the middle of the cross.