mitigated

IPA: mˈɪtʌgeɪtɪd

adjective

  • (of problems or flaws) Lessened, reduced, or diminished, and thereby made better, improved.
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Examples of "mitigated" in Sentences

  • It was Rideau's victimizations that "mitigated" murder into manslaughter.
  • 6 The fearless spirit of Leo, his authority and eloquence, again mitigated the fierceness of a
  • Kousari said that he expected, at best, a "mitigated" reaction from rich nations to UNCTAD's idea.
  • And Dimon's friends have also been reassuring investors that any regulatory impact will be "mitigated" by increasing prices elsewhere:
  • But in a crucial departure from Empiricism and towards what might be called a mitigated rationalism, Kant also holds that not all cognition
  • By returning to work as soon as he could he had 'mitigated' his position in that he reduced his potential loss of earnings claim to virtually nothing.
  • This conservative, fallibilist position, which Hume calls mitigated scepticism, is the proper epistemic attitude for anyone “sensible of the strange infirmities of human understanding”
  • Indeed, of all the problems established in the red team reports, precisely NONE of those risks can be eliminated, perhaps a majority can be "mitigated" or have their risks reduced some, and a few resist even reasonable mitigation attempts.
  • He might be described as a mitigated modernist in these years, in which he advocated the popularization of science by means of Institutes and similar centres of enlightenment, and welcomed new inventions -- while reserving to himself the right to burlesque their possibilities, and to ridicule the pretensions of pompous professors and futile philosophers.

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synonyms for mitigated
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