Intuitive fred888

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Tuesday, December 2, 2025

to desert someone (as in the way people are deserting Trump for betraying them)

I was trying to make sense of the word desert and realized I had the wrong spelling when I used dessert. So, dessert is like ice cream or cake only. where as desert is not only like the Mojave Desert in California it is also to desert someone too I found. 
Dictionary
Definitions from Oxford Languages · Learn more
de·sert1
/dəˈzərt/
verb
verb: desert; 3rd person present: deserts; past tense: deserted; past participle: deserted; gerund or present participle: deserting
  1. abandon (a person, cause, or organization) in a way considered disloyal or treacherous.
    "we feel our public representatives have deserted us"
    h
    Similar:
    abandon
    leave
    give up
    cast off
    turn one's back on
    throw over
    betray
    jilt
    break (up) with
    neglect
    shun
    leave high and dry
    leave in the lurch
    leave behind
    strand
    leave stranded
    maroon
    relinquish
    renounce
    walk/run out on
    rat on
    drop
    dump
    ditch
    give someone the push
    give someone the big E
    bin off
    forsake
    renege on
    repudiate
    forswear
    wash one's hands of
    have no more truck with
    have done with
    abjure
    disavow
    apostatize
    recant
    disprofess
    abandoned
    forsaken
    cast off/aside
    thrown over
    betrayed
    jilted
    shunned
    neglected
    stranded
    marooned
    relinquished
    renounced
    forlorn
    bereft
    dumped
    ditched
    dropped
    h
    Opposite:
    stand by
  • (of a number of people) leave (a place), causing it to appear empty.
    "good weather came after the summer hordes had deserted the beaches"
    h
    Similar:
    empty
    uninhabited
    unoccupied
    unpeopled
    abandoned
    evacuated
    vacant
    vacated
    untenanted
    tenantless
    unfrequented
    neglected
    secluded
    isolated
    desolate
    lonely
    solitary
    godforsaken
    forlorn
    h
    Opposite:
    crowded
    populous

  • (of a quality or ability) fail (someone), especially at a crucial moment when most needed.
    "her luck deserted her"
  • Military
    (of a soldier) illegally run away from military service.
    "his life in the regiment had been such a hell that he decided to desert"
    h
    Similar:
    abscond
    defect
    run away
    make off
    decamp
    flee
    fly
    bolt
    turn tail
    go absent without leave
    take French leave
    depart
    quit
    escape
    go AWOL
    h
    Opposite:
    stay

    Origin
    late Middle English: from Old French deserter, from late Latin desertare, from Latin desertus ‘left waste’ (see desert2).
    des·ert2
    /ˈdezərt/
    noun
    noun: desert; plural noun: deserts
    1. a dry, barren area of land, especially one covered with sand, that is characteristically desolate, waterless, and without vegetation.
      h
      Similar:
      wasteland
      waste
      wilderness
      wilds
      dust bowl
      barren land
    • a situation or area considered dull and uninteresting.
      "a cultural desert"
      h
      Similar:
      uninteresting place/period
      unproductive place/period
      wasteland

    adjective
    adjective: desert
    1. like a desert.
      "overgrazing has created desert conditions"
      h
      Similar:
      arid
      dry
      moistureless
      dried up
      parched
      scorched
      burnt
      hot
      burning
      torrid
      barren
      bare
      stark
      uncultivatable
      infertile
      nonfertile
      unproductive
      unfruitful
      dehydrated
      sterile
      h
      Opposite:
      fertile
    • uninhabited and desolate.
      "desert wastes"
      h
      Similar:
      uninhabited
      empty
      solitary
      lonely
      desolate
      bleak
      dismal
      waste
      wild
      uncultivated
      untended
      untilled

    Origin
    Middle English: via Old French from late Latin desertum ‘something left waste’, neuter past participle of deserere ‘leave, forsake’.
    Use over time for: desert

    intuitivefred888 at 11:28 AM
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    intuitivefred888
    I live in Coastal Northern California at present but was raised mostly in Los Angeles and San Diego Counties. I have also lived in Seattle, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Maui and the big Island of Hawaii. My archive site is: dragonofcompassion.com
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