Corrode in a sentence as a verb

If there's no protection system, what does that leave to corrode?

Metals always seem to find a new way to corrode and bearings find new ways to fail.

It is easy to machine, doesn't corrode, is hard enough to build interesting things, and lightweight.

Such creatures, Qutb believed, could corrode the very bonds that held society together.

It has other properties, too: it doesn't corrode, it's quite rare, it can be easily tested for purity.

HP machines of course had literally gold plated connectors which did not corrode pretty much ever.

Not only do you need to keep water out of the device, but you also need to make sure that it can't collect anywhere and corrode away parts.

This is how the government can corrode away the very social consciousness that people so desparately try to use governments to create.

Novelty aside, tap water will slowly corrode the water block and cause a catastrophic failure long before a more conventional cooling method would fail.

50% of students drop out of high school!Education needs to be disrupted if we ever want to close this gap, the consequences if we don't are massive and will corrode any progress that is made.

The asteroid probably contains a lot of oxygen that could be extracted, but that takes fancy chemical processing, and the oxygen would tend to corrode the working parts.

This exposure undermines the parochial teachings of fundamentalism, and tends to corrode prejudices through contact.

".What does look fishy to me about Musk's argument here is that most vehicle fires seem to be the result of mechanical or electrical faults, which become more likely with age as things wear out and break and corrode.

Corrode definitions

verb

cause to deteriorate due to the action of water, air, or an acid; "The acid corroded the metal"; "The steady dripping of water rusted the metal stopper in the sink"

See also: rust

verb

become destroyed by water, air, or a corrosive such as an acid; "The metal corroded"; "The pipes rusted"

See also: rust