vitiate

ಕೆಡಿಸು
definition
verb
development programs have been vitiated by the rise in population
spoil or impair the quality or efficiency of.
translation of 'vitiate'
ಕುಲಗೆಡಿಸು,
ಕೆಡಿಸು
example
There is abundant authority to show that such frauds as these 'vitiate' consent both in the case of rape and in the case of indecent assault.
The state's interest in effective crime-fighting should never 'vitiate' the citizens' Bill of Rights.
That the singer, Cervantes' Don Quixote, is certainly delusional, possibly mad, doesn't 'vitiate' the song's potency.
There is nothing in the law which would allow me to 'vitiate' a fairly negotiated contract for lawful purposes.
I am not satisfied that the first or third of those matters affected the Judge's judgment to the point where any error should 'vitiate' that judgment.
Under the old law a mistake would 'vitiate' the expert's determination if it could be shown that it affected the result.
To what extent will imperfect, but still good, administration 'vitiate' the efficiency properties of the tax?
Multiple entitlements 'vitiate' demands based on prior existence, occupance, use and discovery.
There must be present some factor which could in law be regarded as coercion of will so as to 'vitiate' consent.
Might this 'vitiate' the importance of the cover?
As a matter of natural justice and procedural fairness, if his departure is so radical as to 'vitiate' the agreement, that would have to be pursued.
For reasons already given we do not accept that the judge's self-direction was 'vitiated' by legal misdirection.
While O'Herlihy's panel gives his show more depth, the comedy programme presented by Keane and Taylor is 'vitiated' by a cacophony of voices.
While not leading to automatic 'vitiation' of the warrant, there remains the need to protect the prior authorization process.
One important issue is when an apparent consent will be 'vitiated' because it was given under duress or without full knowledge of the material facts.
But in this same answer, that great saint recounts another admirable example of a great zeal, proceeding from a very good soul, which was however spoilt and 'vitiated' by the excess of anger which it had stirred up.
In the first place the market manager's presence and hearsay evidence 'vitiated' proceedings, it being against natural justice for a prosecutor to be present during deliberations.
Overindulgence was the 'vitiator' of Junior's previously sweet disposition.
Finally, an apparently valid consent may be 'vitiated' if it is obtained by fraud, which includes cases where a professional deliberately withholds information in bad faith, or by misrepresenting the nature of the proposed care.
As with any other contracts, compromises or consent orders may be 'vitiated' by a common mistake of law.
In spite of our capacity for good, we seem caught in a web of evil that 'vitiates' everything we do. Even what is basically good can be distorted.
Of course the appellate tribunal also has the power to overturn the Commissioners' conclusion on the ground of an error of law, but only if that error 'vitiates' the conclusion.
Economic duress is unlikely to lead to the 'vitiation' of banking transactions.
In a situation that involves a plurality of faiths, a common dress code thus strikes me as a medium of secular arbitration, a function that is 'vitiated' by a blatant divergence from the uniform.
Earlier art, music, or literature could reinterpret the Passion over and over again without 'vitiation' .
A bad guy is no longer simply the opposite of ‘good guy;’ the ensuing but signals the 'vitiation' of the villainous sting of depravity.
Is not your problem that the sentencing judge made mistakes which 'vitiated' his decision and enabled the Court of Criminal Appeal to exercise its own discretion?
It is our submission that the course adopted by the learned trial judge has 'vitiated' the verdict in a number of ways.
The claimants submit that that is a decision to which no reasonable planning authority could come and it 'vitiates' the defendant's consideration of the planning application.
This does not mean that every deviation from procedural regularity and legal correctness 'vitiates' a jury's verdict of guilty.
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