pervasive
				berleluasa
				definition
					
					adjective
					
					ageism is pervasive and entrenched in our society
					
					(especially of an unwelcome influence or physical effect) spreading widely throughout an area or a group of people.
					
					
					
				example
					
					Yet at the end of this period, as at the beginning, the influence of lordship in society was 'pervasive' .
					
					He exercised a 'pervasive' influence on European drama by challenging the conventions of naturalism.
					
					The joys of return and reunion with the homeland thus intermingle with a 'pervasive' and insurmountable feeling of loss.
					
					Crime is now more organised, more professional, more ruthless and more 'pervasive' .
					
					Are they preparing for class or are they simply unknowing subscribers of this 'pervasive' myth?
					
					They include globalisation, the spread of the Internet and the 'pervasive' power of money.
					
					It has become so 'pervasive' that it influences how people write for the Web.
					
					Modern day society is replete with situations that make chronic stress highly 'pervasive' .
					
					Knowledge networks have become 'pervasive' because they can be simple to implement.
					
					Nevertheless, their influence is 'pervasive' within the history of science.
					
					But it's the 'pervasive' humour that wins through, thanks to a nicely crafted script.
					
					Cultures influence and pressure one another all the time, in 'pervasive' and subtle ways.
					
					This phenomenon is not just limited to a few companies, but is widespread and 'pervasive' .
					
					Kinship is one of the more important, 'pervasive' and complex systems of culture.
					
					It is crucial for governments and corporations to face the fact that this feeling is quite 'pervasive' .
					
					The answer depends on how broad and 'pervasive' you like your conspiracies to be.
					
					In this way they are constant and 'pervasive' , endemic to the human condition.
					
					The code of gentility was far more 'pervasive' and important than the influence of the group of self-styled gentry.
					
					One of the things that concerns me about the tone of the site is the kind of 'pervasive' pessimism it contains.
					
					In contrast, peace is a fundamental aspect of the faith and is a very 'pervasive' element in Islam.
					
					Universities are deploying Linux - 'pervasively' and aggressively.
					
					There needs to be a kind of sense of urgency in our society about the 'pervasiveness' of violence
					
					This sentiment - that there is somehow an ‘inappropriate’ time for analysis - is dangerous in its 'pervasiveness' .
					
					Again, the problem lies not so much in the iniquity of believers, but more 'pervasively' in the logical structure of the religions themselves.
					
					It may be impossible to ever know the true 'pervasiveness' of the problem, or the guilt or innocence of riders.
					
					I've regretted this bitterly in the past, but the 'pervasiveness' of the view is undeniable.
					
					The ‘customer,’ therefore, becomes a weighted set of characteristics that 'pervasively' drive the company in all its internal matters.
					
					And such a label, most of the time politically motivated, tends to be one that sticks permanently and is 'pervasively' influential and powerfully contaminating.
					
					What better way to hit home the 'pervasiveness' of these attitudes than in an icon of American popular culture?
					
					However, it's been used so 'pervasively' by public figures and media pundits that I'm not sure anyone has a clear claim to this anymore.
					
					
					
					
				
					Credits: Google Translate