VITIATE | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary The purpose of the laws, the legislative history that preceded them, and the trial testimony that followed them, vitiate the argument that "patterns" of official racial discrimination no longer exist
vitiate - Wiktionary, the free dictionary vitiate (third-person singular simple present vitiates, present participle vitiating, simple past and past participle vitiated) (transitive) To spoil, make faulty; to reduce the value, quality, or effectiveness of something
Vitiate - definition of vitiate by The Free Dictionary 1 to impair the quality of; make faulty; spoil 2 to impair or weaken the effectiveness of 3 to debase; corrupt; pervert 4 to make legally invalid; invalidate: to vitiate a claim
vitiate - Definition, Etymology Meaning | Word Coaster "Vitiate" finds its roots in the Latin word "vitiare," which means to spoil or corrupt This connection underscores its enduring reliance on themes of moral or structural decay
Vitiate Definition Meaning | Britannica Dictionary vitiate (verb) vitiate ˈ vɪʃiˌeɪt verb vitiates; vitiated; vitiating Britannica Dictionary definition of VITIATE [+ object] formal : to make (something) less effective : to ruin or spoil (something)