Débinage, m. (familiar), slandering; running down. From débiner, to talk ill, to depreciate.
Débiner (popular), to depreciate; —— le truc, to disclose a secret; to explode a dodge, or fraud.
Parbleu! je n’ignore pas ce que peuvent dire les blagueurs pour débiner le truc de ces fausses paysannes.—Richepin, Le Pavé.
Se —— des fumerons, to run away, “to leg it.” Se ——, to abuse one another, “to slang one another;” to run away, “to brush,” see [Patatrot]; to grow weak.
Débineur, m., débineuse, f. (popular), one who talks ill of people; one who depreciates people or things.
Déblayer (theatrical), to curtail portions of a part; to hurry through a performance.
A l’Opéra, ce soir ... on déblaye à bras raccourci: vous savez que déblayer signifie écourter.—P. Mahalin.
Débloquer (military), to cancel an order of arrest.
Débonder (popular), to ease oneself; to go to “West Central,” or to the “crapping ken.” See [Mouscailler].
Déborder (popular), to vomit, “to cast up accounts,” or “to shoot the cat.”