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downgrade

noun

  1. reverting software/hardware back to an older version: opposite of upgrade
L319744 on Wikidata ↗

verb

  1. worsen
  2. replace
L331543 on Wikidata ↗

Wiktionary

Pronunciation: /ˈdaʊnˌɡɹeɪd/ / /ˌdaʊnˈɡɹeɪd/

noun

Etymology: Etymology tree English down- English grade English downgrade From down- + grade.

  1. A reduction of a rating, as a financial or credit rating.
  2. A downhill gradient on a road or railway.

    [...] dynamic braking is fitted to the 99-ton, 55 ft.-long locomotives to help control these otherwise vacuum-braked trains on the long, continuous downgrades encountered on the coastal route.

  3. A reduction in quality; a descent towards an inferior state.

    Near-synonyms: degradation, worsening, deterioration

verb

Etymology: Etymology tree English down- English grade English downgrade From down- + grade.

  1. To place lower in position.

    The stock was downgraded from ‘buy’ to ‘sell’.

    Basingstoke-Exeter will test this. From Salisbury westwards, it's largely single-track since British Rail downgraded it in 1967. There's a ten-mile loop between Templecombe and Yeovil, as well as shorter loops at Chard, Axminster and Honiton.

  2. To reduce in complexity, or remove unnecessary parts; to dumb down.

    More significantly, rigid deference to [Justin] Bieber’s still-young core fan base keeps things resolutely PG, with any acknowledgement of sex either couched in vague “touch your body” workarounds or downgraded to desirous hand-holding and eye-gazing.

  3. To disparage.

    We cannot afford to downgrade the lifestyles of other lesbians; we cannot afford to portray lesbians thinly as drunken and bothersome separatists who push their views on "work-within-the-movement" dykes".

    Without downgrading my friends in the Building Trades, driving a nail or sawing a board is relatively simple.

  4. to reduce the official estimate of a storm's intensity.
  5. To revert software back to an older version.