immiserate
English
Etymology
Back-formation from immiseration.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ɪˈmɪzəɹeɪt/
Verb
immiserate (third-person singular simple present immiserates, present participle immiserating, simple past and past participle immiserated)
- (transitive) To impoverish (someone); to make someone sink into misery.
- 1971 November 28, Robert L. Heilbroner, “Phase II of the Capitalist System”, in The New York Times[1], →ISSN:
- By far the most powerful dynamic conception of capitalism as a system wracked by unavoidable change is the classic Marxian view in which a working class is first immiserated, then disciplined, finally goaded beyond endurance by a system that systematically exploits and deceives it.
- 2018 January 16, Greg Goldberg, Antisocial Media: Anxious Labor in the Digital Economy, NYU Press, →ISBN, page 51:
- The fun, pleasurable aspect of playbor troubles scholars because it seems to suggest that playborers are not exploited; exploitation is supposed to be immiserating, not fun.
- 2020, Thomas Orlik, China: The Bubble that Never Pops, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 76:
- Higher inequality, in part the result of a real estate boom that immiserated some and enriched others, meant more wealth in the hands of the high-saving rich.
- 2021, Michael Harris, Stay Alive: Surviving Capitalism’s Coming Hunger Games[2], John Hunt Publishing, →ISBN:
- These regimes will favor older people and contain and immiserate the young.
Related terms
Translations
impoverish
See also
Further reading
- “immiserate”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
Latin
Pronunciation
- (Classical Latin) IPA(key): [ɪm.mɪ.sɛˈraː.tɛ]
- (modern Italianate Ecclesiastical) IPA(key): [im.mi.s̬eˈraː.t̪e]
Participle
immiserāte
- vocative masculine singular of immiserātus