0 to make someone or something very weak
A longing which was indistinguishable from loneliness enfeebled him.
Come away from here, that the sight of this child may not yet more enfeeble your heart.
So utterly had his spirit been enfeebled by the untimely seductions of gluttony.
Unable to find a pass through the mountains, and enfeebled by his wound, Grey determined to retrace his steps.
We were both enfeebled by sickness and He who has been so gracious to us all our lives, knowing we had need of such a change, provided for it in an unexpected way.
In the process, each person would need to wage a struggle against one's family, repressive society, narrow preconceptions and enfeebling ideas.
A crisis has been superintended by discipline, and the disciplinary process emerges from it strengthened, even if the subject is himself somewhat enfeebled.
Likewise, the two-party system and enfeebled trade unions reduce counter-framing from the far-left.