Adulteration in a sentence as a noun

The Chinese have the death penalty for food adulteration with toxic or non-food products[1].

The FDA started as a political response to the adulteration and misbranding of food and ***** in that market.

Maybe the word "adulteration" or "bastardization" would be better?

There was a broader spectrum of adulteration, from lethal danger to deceptive but unlikely to be dangerous to anything but your pocketbook.

Assuming that the original Greek meaning is somehow "correct" and the modern usage is an adulteration is a prescriptive fallacy.

As for sources, there've been various articles about olive oil adulteration over the years...including one really long one from a few years ago that was popular on most aggregator sites - think it was also an NYT article.

Very generally speaking, any successful idea accumulates adulteration over time as it is overused and over-exploited.

According to wikipedia linked:"Like other food substances, dietary supplements are not subject to the safety and efficacy testing requirements imposed on *****, and unlike ***** they do not require prior approval by the FDA; however, they are subject to the FDA regulations regarding adulteration and misbranding.

I'd wager that few overdoses are from first-time users, so the overdoser has some information about their own previous dosages at the very leastThe purity of ***** varies a lot, and a couple of missed steps of dilution and adulteration can easily lead to overdoses.> If the only problem with ***** is that they are illegal, why do they need treatment?

Adulteration definitions

noun

being mixed with extraneous material; the product of adulterating

See also: debasement

noun

the act of adulterating (especially the illicit substitution of one substance for another)