0 to talk about or treat someone or something in a way that shows you do not respect him, her, or it
1 to officially state that a law or rule no longer needs to be obeyed because it no longer has any authority
Detailed textual analysis reveals strategies of marginalizing, patronizing, criminalizing, and in other ways derogating the outgroup.
Nevertheless, nurses have represented to me in no uncertain terms that they regard this exception as one which derogates from the status of their profession.
There is no doubt that quota hopping derogates from the principle of national quotas.
They want their very lives to be derogated by a disability rights commission with the full powers of enforcement.
The public are derogating from their own interests by not paying attention to the order.
The fact that 20 years' experience has suggested improvements and even some changes in principle in no way derogates from the scheme's remarkable success.
After all, when we enter into a treaty we are not derogating from our sovereignty.
Most of the derogated supplies should comply by 1995.