Definition of "deject"
deject
verb
third-person singular simple present dejects, present participle dejecting, simple past and past participle dejected
(transitive) Make sad or dispirited.
Quotations
[…] the Thoughts of my Friends, and native Country, and the Improbability of ever seeing them again, made me very melancholy; and dejected me to that Degree, that sometimes I could not forbear indulging my Grief in private, and bursting out into a Flood of Tears.
1743, Robert Drury, The Pleasant, and Surprizing Adventures of Mr. Robert Drury, during his Fifteen Years Captivity on the Island of Madagascar, London, page 73
Quotations
... as also we might have more feeling and sense of our sweet Saviour Jesus Christ, by the humbling and dejecting of us, thereby to make us, as more desirous of him, so him more sweet and pleasant unto us: the which thing the good Spirit of God work sensibly in all our hearts, for God's holy name's sake.
1853, John Bradford, Aubrey Townsend, The Writings of John Bradford, M.A., page 67
I adore thee , O divine and amiable hand ! that comfortest me by chastising me , that strengthenest me by afflicting me , that elevatest me by dejecting me , and that givest me life by mortifying me.
1863, Thomé Alvares de Andrade, The sufferings of our Lord Jesus Christ, from the Portugese, page 274
As a person sitting over the counter in a bank, represents the bank by virtue of his assignment, projects or dejects the image of the bank as a whole; the policeman on duty at the police station also represents the Police Force as a whole and projects or dejects the image of the Police with the public.
1994, The Indian Police Journal - Volume 41, page 43
noun
plural dejects
Quotations
(usually in the plural) A waste product.
Quotations
... the bacteriological examination of the dejects of all persons presenting choleraic symptoms and of all persons who have been exposed to infection and who have loose and frequent discharges from the bowels ; the disinfection of the dejects of such persons and of all articles which may possibly be contaiminated by the same;
1894, Brooklyn. Dept. of Health, Annual Report, page 71
Along the 90 kilometers of the Tiete river in the greater São Paulo region, it receives a huge amount of dejects, both industrial and human (the latter, dejects collected by sewer systems, dumped untreated or with inadequate treatment in the river).
2001, Werner Baer, The Brazilian Economy: Growth and Development
The region is characterized by an intense intervention of anthropogenic activities, existence of more than 1.700 oil wells, dutes, storage and transport structures of gas and oil, ponds for stabilization and treatment of dejects, pumping and collecting stations besides a marine salt industry and wide areas wtih activities of shrimp farms.
2007, Martin Kappas, Global Change Issues in Developing and Emerging Countries, page 351