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edify
[ ed-uh-fahy ]
verb (used with object)
- to instruct or benefit, especially morally or spiritually; uplift:
religious paintings that edify the viewer.
edify
/ ˈɛdɪˌfaɪ /
verb
- tr to improve the morality, intellect, etc, of, esp by instruction
Derived Forms
- ˈediˌfyingly, adverb
- ˈediˌfying, adjective
- ˈediˌfier, noun
Other Words From
- ed·i·fi·er noun
- non·ed·i·fied adjective
- re·ed·i·fy verb (used with object) reedified reedifying
- un·ed·i·fied adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of edify1
Example Sentences
It’s also a central pillar of the pair’s edifying new sitcom.
I was doing that job, less than part time, for only a brief period, while for the adults working in the dining hall, it was a more permanent and far less edifying condition.
It’s always such an incredible, edifying experience to be around somebody who is a master at their craft.
This may have been a low point, but not even the more edifying moments of the discussion shed much light on the essential conflict between Brustein’s commitment to integration and Wilson’s appeal for separatism.
“It was such an edifying moment for us both to see the scope of a lifetime of work dedicated to investigating these sets of questions that are formal, conceptual, cultural and material.”
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