Vitiated in a sentence as an adjective

"good for all debts, public and private" has a meaning that is not vitiated by a "no cash" policy.

See the "Mobike Score" [0].I hate the rhetoric that the streets are being vitiated by shared transportation.

I mean that if relations with someone else are twisted, vitiated, then that other person can only be ****.

The underlying assumption of independent draws from a Bernoulli distribution is vitiated, as the order in which the siblings are read usually affects their proportion of upvotes to downvotes.

This inconsistency implies not only that the Gini cannot lend itself to comparisons between units of different size but that intertemporal assessments are vitiated by the population changes.

"more popular in the academic circles and among certain groups of people who are looking for a rational and more liberal approach towards the Qur'an" ... "Saudi Arabia banned it" ... "vitiated by deviation from the viewpoint of the Muslim orthodoxy on many counts.

Despite the wave of mergers and trusts formed around the turn of the century, Kolko reveals, the forces of competition on the free market rapidly vitiated and dissolved these attempts at stabilizing and perpetuating the economic power of big business interests.

The indoctrination is insidious; at school, right from very early grades, up to university, where professors who dare to question the liberal orthodoxy are shouted down or driven out altogether, to corporations, where people who want to just show up and do work in an apolitical environment are subjected to incessant haranguing and a vitiated atmosphere.

Vitiated definitions

adjective

impaired by diminution

See also: diminished lessened weakened

adjective

ruined in character or quality

See also: corrupted debased