CORRUPT vs VITIATE: ADJECTIVE
- Tainted; putrid.
- Containing errors or alterations, especially ones that prevent proper understanding or use.
- Venal or dishonest.
- Marked by immorality and perversion; depraved.
- Not straight; dishonest or immoral or evasive
- Touched by rot or decay
- Containing errors or alterations
- Lacking in integrity
- Changed from a sound to a putrid state; spoiled; tainted; vitiated; unsound.
- Changed from a state of uprightness, correctness, truth, etc., to a worse state; vitiated; depraved; debased; perverted.
- Abounding in errors; not genuine or correct.
- In a depraved state; debased; perverted; morally degenerate; weak in morals.
- With lots of errors in it; not genuine or correct; in an invalid state.
- N/A
CORRUPT vs VITIATE: VERB
- Corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality
- Alter from the original
- Make illegal payments to in exchange for favors or influence
- Place under suspicion or cast doubt upon
- To make corrupt; to change from good to bad; to draw away from the right path; to deprave; to pervert.
- To violate, to rape
- To debase or morally corrupt
- To spoil, make faulty; to reduce the value, quality, or effectiveness of something
- Take away the legal force of or render ineffective
- Make imperfect
- Corrupt morally or by intemperance or sensuality
- To make something ineffective, to invalidate
CORRUPT vs VITIATE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To ruin morally; pervert.
- To destroy or subvert the honesty or integrity of, as by offering bribes.
- To cause to become rotten; spoil.
- To render impure; contaminate.
- To alter from original or proper form.
- To damage (data) in a file or on a disk.
- To become corrupt.
- To become vitiated; to lose purity or goodness.
- To become putrid or tainted; to putrefy; to rot.
- N/A
CORRUPT vs VITIATE: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To waste, spoil, or consume; to make worthless.
- To draw aside from the path of rectitude and duty.
- To change from good to bad; to vitiate; to deprave; to pervert; to debase; to defile.
- To reduce the value or quality of; impair or spoil.
- To corrupt morally; debase: : corrupt.
- To make ineffective (a contract or legal stipulation, for example); invalidate.
- To make vicious, faulty, or imperfect; to render defective; to injure the substance or qualities of; to impair; to contaminate; to spoil
- To cause to fail of effect, either wholly or in part; to make void; to destroy, as the validity or binding force of an instrument or transaction; to annul.
CORRUPT vs VITIATE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Dishonest; without integrity; guilty of dishonesty involving bribery, or a disposition to bribe or be bribed: as, corrupt practices; a corrupt judge.
- Debased in character; depraved; perverted; infected with evil.
- Decomposing, or showing signs of decomposition; putrid; spoiled; tainted; vitiated.
- Legally tainted, as by an act of attainder of treason or felony: said of the blood of one legally attainted. See corruption, 8.
- Synonyms Decay, Putrefy, etc. See rot.
- To become putrid; putrefy; rot.
- Synonyms Spoil, taint. Contaminate, deprave, demoralize. See taint, v. t.
- To debase or render impure by alterations or innovations; infect with imperfections or errors; falsify; pervert: as, to corrupt language; to corrupt a text.
- Not straight
- Dishonest or immoral or evasive
- To pervert or vitiate the integrity of; entice from allegiance, or from a good to an evil course of conduct; influence by a bribe or other wrong motive.
- To vitiate or deprave, in a moral sense; change from good to bad; infect with evil; pervert; debase.
- Changed for the worse; debased or falsified by admixture, addition, or alteration; erroneous or full of errors: as, a corrupt text.
- To vitiate physically; render unsound; taint or contaminate as with disease; decompose: as, to corrupt the blood.
- To injure; mar; spoil; destroy.
- To change from a sound to a putrid or putrescent state; cause the decomposition of (an organic body), as by a natural process, accompanied by a fetid smell; change from a good to a bad physical condition, in any way.
- To render vicious, faulty, or imperfect; injure the quality or substance of; cause to be defective; impair; spoil; corrupt: as, a vitiated taste.
- To cause to fail of effect, either in whole or in part; render invalid or of no effect; destroy the validity or binding force of, as of a legal instrument or a transaction; divest of legal value or authority; invalidate: as, any undue influence exerted on a jury vitiates their verdict; fraud vitiates a contact; a court is vitiated by the presence of unqualified persons sitting as members of it.
- Synonyms Pollute, Corrupt, etc. (see taint), debase, deprave.
CORRUPT vs VITIATE: RELATED WORDS
- Dirty, Sordid, Reprobate, Praetorian, Depraved, Rotten, Immoral, Deprave, Perverted, Bribable, Bribe, Unscrupulous, Crooked, Dishonest, Venal
- Undermine, Profane, Void, Deflower, Corrupt, Debauch, Pervert, Misdirect, Debase, Deprave, Impair, Demoralize, Spoil, Invalidate, Mar
CORRUPT vs VITIATE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Underhanded, Dirty, Sordid, Reprobate, Praetorian, Depraved, Rotten, Immoral, Deprave, Perverted, Bribable, Unscrupulous, Crooked, Dishonest, Venal
- Disturb, Undermine, Profane, Void, Deflower, Corrupt, Debauch, Pervert, Misdirect, Deprave, Impair, Demoralize, Spoil, Invalidate, Mar
CORRUPT vs VITIATE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- He said the sole aim of the NAB was to recover looted money from corrupt elements, while taking the corrupt elements to justice.
- Political scandals are shifting from illegal or corrupt activities towards personal missteps no longer about illegal or corrupt activities.
- CEOs and corrupt banks and big pharma, yet endorsed a corrupt politician who has taken donations from them, including Wells Fargo.
- It can recover data lost under different scenarios like accidentally deleted documents, corrupt Word files, lost partition, corrupt storage, etc.
- Voters feel they are voting out a corrupt government, when in fact the new government is corrupt.
- This application offers you to remove corrupt drivers; these corrupt drivers grow down the system utility.
- Windows would say they are corrupt when Windows itself is corrupt.
- However corrupt Bartlet may have let himself become, he never wants to corrupt anyone else.
- Filipinos consider the private sector to be either corrupt or extremely corrupt.
- Eugenio Figueredo, an allegedly corrupt football official, and two corrupt businessmen.
- And they do not threaten to vitiate the free speech guarantee.
- This is not to say that deception can never vitiate consent.
- Their disclosure serves no purpose other than to vitiate Mr.
- Rubenfeld himself has ably demonstrated how deception can vitiate consent.
- Such a reading would vitiate the time of loss clause.
- Misrepresentation by a third person does not vitiate consent.
- Demand for receipt not to vitiate a legal tender.
- SYN: Seduce, corrupt, ravish, violate, pollute, defile, vitiate.
- Guardian ad litem does not vitiate the decree.
- Mistake of law does not generally vitiate consent.
CORRUPT vs VITIATE: QUESTIONS
- Do bribes and kickbacks corrupt professional judgment?
- Bagaimana cara memperbaiki Corrupt Workbook di ExCeL?
- Should the government punish fraudsters and corrupt?
- How do centrist nations become corrupt dictatorships?
- Should oil companies partner with corrupt dictators?
- Bagaimana cara mengembalikan data yang sudah Corrupt?
- Does the Global Corruption Index corrupt perceptions?
- Does Firefox corrupt bookmarks and browsing history?
- Were carpetbaggers reformers or corrupt opportunists?
- Is an unsubstantiated allegation ethically corrupt?
- Does the insertion of'interest'after a note vitiate the process?
- Does out of an abundance of caution vitiate legislative authority?
- Who would win in a lightsaber duel Darth Sidious vs vitiate?