enervate Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˈen.ə.veɪt]
  • Us [ ˈen.ɚ.veɪt]

Meaning of enervate In English

More Definitions of enervate

Examples of enervate

  • Even educational establishments are suspect on the ground—not unnatural after his own experience of Oxford—that their possibilities of comfort may enervate the natural energies of men. 

  • It enervated the people and left them powerless to cope with those enemies who, as soon as the iron hand of the Roman legions was removed, came forth from their hiding places to harry the land. 

  • Shun all that may enervate or diminish your youthful energies. 

  • The man in full possession of his mental qualities and corporeal strength is, in most cases, very different from that unfortunate being whose mind is, enervated by sufferings and whose body is weakened by wants. 

  • Their enjoyment seemed derived so directly from nature that it almost excited a feeling of regret that civilised men, enervated by luxury and all its concomitant diseases, should ever disturb the haunts of these rude but happy beings. 

  • The neural machinery for controlling muscles and for enervating the sensory surface might reasonably increase with some function of body size.

  • Those collapses, however, do not enervate the productivity of analogy; they merely expose the extra levels of mediation that analogy compels.

  • Through such metaphorical comparisons, white-collar masculinity was, then, at once energised and enervated.

More Examples of enervate

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