0 past simple and past participle of vitiate
The ducted exhaust of 'vitiated air' was removed through grilles near or in the ceiling.
This was due to the inherent structure of the enterprise missionaries built up themselves, which vitiated its own religiosity.
This view gives rise to a pessimism that a political praxis is useless because it is already vitiated by capitalist hegemony.
Yet these strengths are often vitiated by the book's combative tone.
That quality is vitiated once domestic functions take on the cast of administrative machinery.
On the contrary, by its repressive actions, it helped expand that base and, in turn, vitiated its own efforts.
And, its apparent role in complex planning is at least greatly vitiated.
The spread of automobility and electronic communications networks have further vitiated the core-periphery relationship between work places and domestic places.