enfeeble

IPA: ɛnfˈibʌɫ

verb

  • (transitive) To make feeble.
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Examples of "enfeeble" in Sentences

  • She enfeebled them with words.
  • They should not enfeeble people.
  • The medicine can enfeeble their bodies.
  • The positive words did not enfeeble men.
  • He thought he could enfeeble the persons.
  • Negative sounding words may enfeeble them.
  • They should not hope to enfeeble one another.
  • The words can actually enfeeble human beings.
  • It can enfeeble them and emaciate their spirit.
  • It would be unfair to enfeeble the weak and the poor.
  • And it would enfeeble the Democratic Party for a generation.
  • It serves always to distract the public councils and enfeeble the public administration.
  • Japan and the U.K. The spending cuts and tax hikes they will be forced to impose will impair growth and enfeeble currencies.
  • All available evidence suggests that long bouts of unemployment — particularly male unemployment — still enfeeble the jobless and warp their families to a similar degree, and in many of the same ways.
  • It has failed to do so because, among other things, its restless campaign to enfeeble the African state and its role in the economy has not succeeded in overcoming the environment of unproductive and pervasive rent seeking, he said.
  • Where the people are Catholic and submissive to the law of God, as declared and applied by the vicar of Christ and supreme pastor of the church, democracy may be a good form of government; but combined with Protestantism or infidelity in the people, its inevitable tendency is to lower the standard of morality, to enfeeble intellect, to abase character, and to retard civilization, as even our short American experience amply proves.

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synonyms for enfeeble
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