Dilute in a sentence as a verb

If you want to dilute what the words means to the point it can mean just about any crime, sure.

They "helped" them dilute to pave the way for future takeover.

If we open the floodgates, it will attract lots of people who will dilute the site.

"More languages, tools, people, and ideas" can just as easily dilute your focus as improve your skill.

Once they fire you, they can dilute you and other people who are not with the company somewhat easily.

The stories about being diluted out of ownership are common because it happens all the time.

Dilute in a sentence as an adjective

I fully support the idea that we should have root on devices we own, it's just a shame he had to dilute that point by pushing his own platform.

As a German, I consider this a desperate attempt to dilute the efforts of the opposition to organize nationwide rallies on saturday.

Is there a reason CEOs cannot use normal English but have to dilute the language so much?For me the TL:DR after struggling to read it was - full steam ahead to the biggest walled garden on earth.

It is not "fool"-proof, but it will probably dilute an unmitigated disaster into an incomplete disaster: Keep a file named -i in the sensitive directories.

Pellet and re-suspend a small vial of cells to dilute out the media, replace with a special preservation media then dunk the entire 5mL vial in a big pot of liquid nitrogen for a few minutes.

Dilute definitions

verb

lessen the strength or flavor of a solution or mixture; "cut bourbon"

See also: thin reduce

verb

corrupt, debase, or make impure by adding a foreign or inferior substance; often by replacing valuable ingredients with inferior ones; "adulterate liquor"

See also: load adulterate stretch debase

adjective

reduced in strength or concentration or quality or purity; "diluted alcohol"; "a dilute solution"; "dilute acetic acid"

See also: diluted