Decimate in a sentence as a verb

If you decimate their bank in the first 100 spins that player will never come back.

It'd decimate more than half of a $25 donation.

And with its sheer user base and content it would be able to decimate smaller competitors.

Google's going to decimate the existing cable and DSL offerings in Kansas City in less than a week.

This will decimate your ability to use it for large data sets, but it's easy to avoid after you get a little bit of practice in.

If superior AI is needed at any rate, we could think that the tech leading to sure extinction is indeed robots who decimate us humans.

But I think the word "decimate" decoupled from its original meaning sometime between the fall of the Roman Empire and today.

May the spam of a thousand recruiters looking for "Senior Java developers" flood your inbox and decimate your sanity MacCaw.

This Groklaw piece does a splendid job of picking the high points from the critique that Google's lawyers have put together to decimate the report of Oracle's key damages expert.

The notion of a polar thaw is tossed around as being desirable for canada as a shipping route....BUT this would decimate the living biosphere of 90% of canadians who live within 100 miles of the US border.

"It's all fun and games until an American technology company leverages their market share and business model to decimate a European technology company.

I don't mind waiting to see what happens - I'm actually kind of curious to see how it changes the community - but my guess is it will decimate the number of comments per thread because it filters the signal as well as the noise.

Never under-estimate the ability of a stressful situation to completely decimate your ability to perform as hoped, regardless of programming ability.

Decimate definitions

verb

kill one in every ten, as of mutineers in Roman armies

verb

kill in large numbers; "the plague wiped out an entire population"

See also: eliminate annihilate extinguish eradicate