vitiating Meaning & Definition

  • En [ ˈvɪʃ.i.eɪt]
  • Us [ ˈvɪʃ.i.eɪt]

Meaning of vitiating In English

More Definitions of vitiating

Examples of vitiating

  • The only factor that may have a vitiating influence is the progressively larger female cohorts entering the child-bearing years.

  • Out of an abundance of caution, let us revisit the charge of vitiating legislative authority.

  • Presumably, vitiating a blame attribution through excuses will also avoid the negative affective sequelae of blame attributions and result in less self- or other-directed negative affect.

  • Machine learning experiments on grammar induction, particularly those involving unsupervised learning, can contribute important insights into the necessary conditions for language acquisition, at the least by vitiating poverty-of-stimulus arguments.

  • Hemmed in by opposition to his first attempts to alter the system,9 the amir tried to maintain the letter of the constitution while vitiating its spirit.

  • I ask that they be brought in at some stage without vitiating the principle which we apply for the country as a whole.

  • It just happens that in the present case the one is vitiating the other.

  • He spoke of the danger of vitiating comparisons with previous years.

More Examples of vitiating

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May 10, 2021

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