0 past simple and past participle of discredit --
1 to cause people to stop respecting someone or believing in an idea or person: --
My view is that neither database should be completely discredited.
Elster clearly believes that he has discredited the loose interpretation.
That approach is not nave, antiquated or discredited.
It was the emergence of the documentary tradition in the nineteenth century as the mark of professional history that discredited the oral traditions.
Both the army and the regime were also discredited.
How can the abstract notion or idea of authority remain sacred when all around its embodiments are being discredited?
In the early twentieth century, examination of rhyme came to be discredited as a procedure for analyzing the phonology of language.
To put it differently, the moral of the small-state realism remained when small-state realism itself was discredited.