deter
verb /dɪˈtɜː(r)/
/dɪˈtɜːr/
[transitive, intransitive]Verb Forms
present simple I / you / we / they deter | /dɪˈtɜː(r)/ /dɪˈtɜːr/ |
he / she / it deters | /dɪˈtɜːz/ /dɪˈtɜːrz/ |
past simple deterred | /dɪˈtɜːd/ /dɪˈtɜːrd/ |
past participle deterred | /dɪˈtɜːd/ /dɪˈtɜːrd/ |
-ing form deterring | /dɪˈtɜːrɪŋ/ /dɪˈtɜːrɪŋ/ |
- deter (somebody) (from something/from doing something) to make somebody decide not to do something or continue doing something, especially by making them understand the difficulties and unpleasant results of their actions
- I told him I wasn't interested, but he wasn't deterred.
- The high price of the service could deter people from seeking advice.
Extra Examples- The present system does little to deter corporate crime.
- These new rules are likely to deter people from coming forward for help.
- Will this harsher punishment effectively deter criminals?
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadverb- hardly
- effectively
- easily
- …
- be likely to
- be unlikely to
- be enough to
- …
- from
Word Originmid 16th cent.: from Latin deterrere, from de- ‘away from’ + terrere ‘frighten’.