tamp down
English
editPronunciation
editAudio (General Australian): (file)
Verb
edittamp down (third-person singular simple present tamps down, present participle tamping down, simple past and past participle tamped down)
- To compact a substance (usually soil) until it is flat.
- (idiomatic, by extension) To suppress or reduce (something, usually an emotion or thought).
- 2024 September 11, Richard Brody, ““Winner” Takes Political Comedy Seriously”, in The New Yorker[2]:
- [Tina] Satter’s “Reality” has a dramatic vigor that’s missing from the corresponding scenes in [Susanna] Fogel’s “Winner,” but the tamped-down tone in “Winner” is actually closer to the actual tone of those interrogations, as heard firsthand in yet another film—Sonia Kennebeck’s 2021 documentary, “Reality Winner.”
Translations
editTo compact a substance
|
To suppress something
|