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Example sentences for "vitiated"

Lexicographically close words:
vitesse; vith; vithout; vitia; vitiate; vitiates; vitiating; vitiation; viticultural; viticulture
  1. They are vastly important to comedians who may not be specially gifted for improvisation; and everything of the sort I found in their repertory was vitiated by the turgid mannerisms of the seicento.

  2. She also hoped to make me a screen for carrying on intrigues in accordance with her vitiated principles.

  3. For if not, then it did not exist at all; and if it did exist in some nature, then it vitiated and corrupted it, and injured it, and consequently deprived it of good.

  4. And when a vitiated nature is punished, besides the good it has in being a nature, it has this also, that it is not unpunished.

  5. And it was not as yet vitiated by the institution of Cicisbeism.

  6. The exacerbation of the malady portended and accompanied the dissolution of medieval beliefs in a population vexed by war, famine and pestilence, and vitiated by ecclesiastical corruption.

  7. He was the last, the most perfect, if also the most vitiated product of Renaissance manners.

  8. Incapable of understanding tragedy, these writers of a vitiated age sought excitement in monstrous situations.

  9. It is by no means uncommon to find prostitutes, grown too old for a trade that has vitiated every cell and secretion of their bodies (to say nothing of mental vitiation), officiating in the capacity of nursemaid to children of culture.

  10. Its poor nascent brain and faculties will have been dulled and depleted, stupefied and vitiated by the stress and turmoil of its mother's labours.

  11. At the low level of their prams, they breathe air vitiated by the passers-by; are in the exhausting whirl and press of swirling nerve-currents.

  12. Painters and sculptors have good cause to know that the modern female foot is a hideous object--our vitiated taste has become accustomed to it when clothed, but when seen in its naked deformity it is a thing to shudder at.

  13. The superstition of another "true" world which floats above this world of phenomena or is secretly hidden behind it has so vitiated logic that it is now difficult to remove the discordant metaphysical "concept of being" from the human mind.

  14. However, so long as conditions are not equalized for men in general, but vitiated by class interests, our view of things is influenced by these class limitations.

  15. He stood between Scotland and France and Germany and France; and, though his expositions are vitiated by loose reading of the philosophers he interpreted, he did serviceable, even memorable work.

  16. And evil is removed, not by removing any nature, or part of a nature, which had been introduced by the evil, but by healing and correcting that which had been vitiated and depraved.

  17. Does not this show what vitiated nature inclines and tends to by its own weight, and what succour it needs if it is to be delivered?

  18. This nature, so constituted that offspring could not be looked for, symbolized the nature of the human race vitiated by sin and by just consequence condemned, which deserves no future felicity.

  19. I mean now to speak of the blessings which God has conferred or still confers upon our nature, vitiated and condemned as it is.

  20. But this is vitiated by a desire for recognition, a definite, almost a confessed, ambition.

  21. The cause of many ailments of the nose, throat and lungs during the winter months is attributed by physiologists to breathing almost constantly the dry vitiated indoor air.

  22. The register S represents the discharge duct through which the vitiated air is forced from the room.

  23. The best ventilation is attained where a constant supply of fresh air is admitted to the house at points from which the best circulation may be secured and equal quantities of vitiated air are removed from the different apartments.

  24. This arrangement assures a supply of oxygen even though no special means is arranged for discharging the vitiated air from the rooms.

  25. Late hours, high living, heated blood, and vitiated atmosphere are the causes of this alarming physical defect.

  26. Another glaring instance of the lack of straightforwardness which vitiated the dealings of the Conference with the public turned upon the Bullitt mission to Russia.

  27. Every smoker, who has not vitiated his nervous system by raw excess, knows that there is no physical pleasure in the long run comparable with that which is afforded by tobacco.

  28. The moral taste, like the natural, is vitiated by abuse.

  29. And those to whom I refer as having studied this question, believing the evidence offered in favour of "spontaneous generation" to be vitiated by error, cannot accept it.

  30. And this stronger wish causes him to reject the most plausible support, if he has reason to suspect that it is vitiated by error.

  31. Your plan contemplates a monopoly such that everybody who refused or was unable to buy your product would, at best, have to get along with vitiated air, and at worst would have to stifle.

  32. They eat and drink and breathe the leavings, anyhow--eat the cheapest and most adulterated food, drink the vilest slop and breathe the most vitiated slum air.

  33. They would look upon the one as wholly vitiated and poisoned by the other; and, if they could not be separated, would infallibly resist them both together.

  34. That germs may be accidentally vitiated and impaired there can be no doubt; but such an adventitious occurrence does not constitute an original monstruosity.

  35. Those vitiated conditions which are usually noticed may be classed as follows: I.

  36. State fully how the blood supply may be vitiated and what terrible consequences may follow.

  37. To correct this vitiated taste, and bring men back to reason and common sense, our whimsical artist etched this very grotesque print.


  38. The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "vitiated" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.