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English
Etymology
From Latindēprecātus, past participle of dēprecārī(“to pray against (a present or impending evil), pray for, intercede for (that which is in danger), rarely imprecate”), from dē-(“off”) + precārī(“to pray”).
2012, James Lambert, “Beyond Hobson-Jobson: A new lexicography for Indian English”, in World Englishes, page 295:
Prior to the 1980s, Australian English had been widely deprecated by Australians themselves, principally as a result of a sense of inferiority known as "cultural cringe".
(transitive, chiefly computing) To declare something obsolescent; to recommend against a function, technique, command, etc. that still works but has been replaced.
The 'bold' tag has been deprecated in favour of the 'strong' tag.
It is still supported but strongly deprecated.
2003, Dave Evans et al., Perl, CGI, and JavaScript Complete, Sybex, →ISBN:
A deprecated function works in the currently released version of Perl 5 but may not be supported in future releases of Perl 5.
1701, Nehemiah Grew, Cosmologia Sacra, London: W. Rogers, S. Smith, and B. Walford, page 126:
And in deprecating of Evil, we make an humble Acknowledgement of Guilt; and of God’s Juſtice in chaſtizing, as well as Clemency, in ſparing the Guilty.
1712, George Smalridge, A Sermon, Preach’d at the Royal Chapel at St. James’s on Wedneſday, January the 16th, 1711/12, London: Jonah Bowyer, page 18:
[…], though the Temporal Judgments which We Deprecate, are not remov’d.
Do not confuse with depreciate(“decline in value / disparage”), despite the fact that AHD4 states that deprecate has almost completely supplanted depreciate, which is sometimes condemned as a confusion of two different words.