0 past simple and past participle of corrupt --
1 to make someone or something become dishonest or immoral: --
2 to change information on a computer so that it is wrong and cannot be used: --
They assumed that the chant currently being sung, which clearly did not fit exactly the modal classifications, had been corrupted through time and scribal error.
Yet each is corrupted in its overt demotic message by one or more conventions borrowed from the romance tradition of fiction.
In addition to potential corruption in the process of signal transmission, a message can be corrupted at both the source and destination of the message.
We have seen that the 'only if ' part from right to left in the satisfaction condition is corrupted.
Projects were corrupted by the financial demands of the crown and the speculative investment of patronage seekers.
This analysis has so far been centred on dispelling the dominant notion that elections were controlled, and therefore corrupted, by governments.
He almost certainly doubted that there had ever been any revelation to be corrupted.
Thus, corrupted norms are marked by low behavioural determinacy, but sufficiently strong moral persuasiveness.