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“abash”
abash (uh BAHSH) (verb), abashes; abashed; abashing
1. To embarrass or to destroy a person's self confidence; to disconcert someone by upsetting his or her composure: The violinist was abashed when the string on her violin broke right in the middle of her recital.
2. Etymology: from Latin ex-, "out of" + baer "to gape, to be open"; from batare "to yawn, to gape".

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
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2. Etymology: from Latin ex-, "out of" + baer "to gape, to be open"; from batare "to yawn, to gape".


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This entry is located in the following unit:
English Words in Action, Group A
(page 1)
To destroy one's self-confidence or to confuse or confound someone. (2)