0 If soil, stone, etc erodes or is eroded, it is gradually damaged and removed by the sea, rain, or wind. -- erodować, ulegać erozji
[ often passive ] The coastline is slowly being eroded by the sea.
1 to gradually destroy a good quality or situation -- podkopywać, nadwątlić
Reports of corruption have eroded people's confidence in the police.
He argues against the view that medical professionalism was eroded by the power of the state or the competition of traditional medicine.
Second, the ascendancy of the military in economic activities from the 1960s eroded the power and cohesion of pribumi capital.
Staff costs dominate the costs of care, and not surprisingly providers identified increases in salaries and wages as eroding their financial viability.
The contemporary approach to city design often neglects or erodes the public realm in favour of private zones of exclusion.
In the whole southern realm, social status was eroded by commercial activity.
In that sense, while remunerated and recognised in the present, their human capital may be eroded, and their future employability jeopardised.
The lord wears an elaborate hip- and loincloth, which is also eroded.
The surface of the figure is highly eroded; slip is not preserved.