Advertisement
Advertisement
vitiate
[ vish-ee-eyt ]
verb (used with object)
- to impair the quality of; make faulty; spoil.
- to impair or weaken the effectiveness of.
- to make legally defective or invalid; invalidate:
to vitiate a claim.
vitiate
/ 藞惫瑟蕛瑟藢别瑟迟 /
verb
- to make faulty or imperfect
- to debase, pervert, or corrupt
- to destroy the force or legal effect of (a deed, etc)
to vitiate a contract
Derived Forms
- 藞惫颈迟颈藢补迟辞谤, noun
- 藞惫颈迟颈补产濒别, adjective
- 藢惫颈迟颈藞补迟颈辞苍, noun
Other 亚洲网紅露点 Forms
- 惫颈顎卼颈路补顎僼颈辞苍 noun
- 惫颈顎僼颈路补顎卼辞谤 noun
- 苍辞苍顎卾颈路迟颈路补顎僼颈辞苍 noun
- 耻苍路惫颈顎僼颈路补迟顎卐诲 adjective
- 耻苍路惫颈顎僼颈路补迟顎卛苍驳 adjective
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of vitiate1
Example Sentences
Then, feigning originalism in Dobbs, they vitiated Equal Protection, elevating the legal rights of zygotes over those of living, breathing women, citing 12th-century mores when men like Alito burned women like me at the stake.
And, especially relevant to Edelman in this case: Is it vitiated by bad motives?
The seizure supposedly vitiated his argument for ownership, which was: If the cash is not my money, whose is it?
PBS SoCal does not value its own programs by vitiating the viewer鈥檚 experience.
Giving that up, Professor Bale said, would vitiate the ideological rationale of her government and potentially turn her into a lame-duck leader until the next election, which she will have to call by early 2025.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse