Deafen
1Deafen — Deaf en, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Deafened}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Deafening}.] [From {Deaf}.] 1. To make deaf; to deprive of the power of hearing; to render incapable of perceiving sounds distinctly. [1913 Webster] Deafened and stunned with their… …
2deafen — 1590s, to make deaf, from DEAF (Cf. deaf) + EN (Cf. en) (1). The earlier verb was simply deaf (mid 15c.). For to become deaf, to grow deaf, O.E. had adeafian (intrans.), which survived into M.E. as deave but then took on a transitive sense from… …
3deafen — ► VERB 1) cause to become deaf. 2) (deafening) extremely loud. DERIVATIVES deafeningly adverb …
4deafen — [def′ən] vt. 1. to make deaf 2. to overwhelm with noise 3. Archaic to drown out (a sound) with a louder sound deafening adj., n. deafeningly adv …
5deafen — UK [ˈdef(ə)n] / US verb [transitive] Word forms deafen : present tense I/you/we/they deafen he/she/it deafens present participle deafening past tense deafened past participle deafened 1) if a noise deafens you, you cannot hear anything else… …
6deafen — verb make deaf. ↘[as adjective deafening] extremely loud. ↘(deafen someone to) (of a sound) make someone unaware of (other sounds). Derivatives deafeningly adverb …
7deafen someone to — (of a sound) make someone unaware of (other sounds). → deafen …
8deafen — transitive verb (deafened; deafening) Date: 1597 to make deaf < was deafened by the explosion > …
9deafen — deafeningly, adv. /def euhn/, v.t. 1. to make deaf: The accident deafened him for life. 2. to stun or overwhelm with noise: The pounding of the machines deafened us. 3. deaden (def. 3). 4. Obs. to render (a sound) inaudible, esp. by a louder… …
10deafen — verb a) To make deaf, either temporarily or permanently b) To make soundproof …