suppress
suppress — verb
1. to use military or official force to bring an end to a rebellion, protest, or po
to use military or official force to bring an end to a rebellion, protest, or political activity that challenges a government or authority
General Mizuki's troops suppressed the rebellion within forty-eight hours, restoring calm to the region.
collocation: suppress + rebellion / uprising
The government suppressed the newspaper after it published reports about official corruption.
collocation: suppress + a newspaper / publication
Nora watched as police suppressed the peaceful march, and she felt her hope crumble.
When students protested the tuition increase, the university suppressed their movement by closing the campus.
The regime used military force to suppress any form of political dissent in the region.
- crush
stronger, implying complete and often violent destruction of the opposition
- quell
slightly more literary; focuses on calming or pacifying rather than destroying
- put down
phrasal verb, less formal; used in everyday news reporting
- subdue
implies bringing under control rather than necessarily ending the activity
文法句型
suppress + object (rebellion / protest / dissent / opposition)
用法筆記
Commonly used in political and military contexts. The subject is typically a government, regime, army, or other authority. Typical objects include rebellion, uprising, protest, dissent, and opposition.
常見錯誤
2. to prevent a feeling, piece of information, or natural process from being seen,
to prevent a feeling, piece of information, or natural process from being seen, expressed, known, or developing
Adina tried to suppress her laughter during the ceremony, but she could not stop.
collocation: suppress + laughter / emotion
The company suppressed the test results because they showed a serious safety problem.
collocation: suppress + information / results
The doctor prescribed medicine to suppress the growth of the cancer cells.
Kian had suppressed the memory of the accident so deeply that he almost forgot it.
Brooke suppressed her desire to quit and continued working on the difficult project.
- restrain
more about physical or behavioural control; you restrain a person, not an emotion
- inhibit
more formal and often technical; common in psychology and biology
- stifle
carries a negative connotation of smothering something natural, like creativity or a yawn
- conceal
specifically about hiding information or objects; not used for emotions or biological processes
文法句型
suppress + object (emotion / information / growth / memory)
用法筆記
Covers three main sub-contexts: (1) emotional — holding back feelings like anger, laughter, or tears; (2) informational — keeping reports, data, or news from public knowledge; (3) biological/medical — slowing or stopping natural processes such as growth, the immune response, or infection. Distinguish from sense 1 (STOP BY FORCE), where the object is an organised activity or group, not a feeling or hidden fact.