| MISHEAR | • mishear v. (Transitive, intransitive) To hear wrongly. • mishear v. To misunderstand. (Can we add an example for this sense?) • MISHEAR v. to hear incorrectly. |
| MISHEARD | • misheard v. Simple past tense and past participle of mishear. • MISHEAR v. to hear incorrectly. |
| MISHEARS | • mishears v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of mishear. • MISHEAR v. to hear incorrectly. |
| DISHEARTEN | • dishearten v. (Transitive) To discourage someone by removing their enthusiasm or courage. • DISHEARTEN v. to cause to lose spirit or morale. |
| MISHEARING | • mishearing v. Present participle of mishear. • mishearing n. The act of hearing something incorrectly. • MISHEAR v. to hear incorrectly. |
| DISHEARTENS | • disheartens v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of dishearten. • DISHEARTEN v. to cause to lose spirit or morale. |
| DISHEARTENED | • disheartened adj. Discouraged, despairing. • disheartened v. Simple past tense and past participle of dishearten. • DISHEARTEN v. to cause to lose spirit or morale. |
| DISHEARTENING | • disheartening adj. Causing a person to lose heart; making despondent or gloomy. • disheartening v. Present participle of dishearten. • DISHEARTEN v. to cause to lose spirit or morale. |
| DISHEARTENMENT | • disheartenment n. The act of disheartening. • disheartenment n. The state of being disheartened; dejection. • DISHEARTENMENT n. the state of being disheartened. |
| DISHEARTENINGLY | • dishearteningly adv. In a disheartening manner. • DISHEARTENING adv. DISHEARTEN, to cause to lose spirit or morale. |
| DISHEARTENMENTS | • disheartenments n. Plural of disheartenment. • DISHEARTENMENT n. the state of being disheartened. |