View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Vitiated.
Vitiated meaning
simple past and past participle of vitiate
Example sentences (17)
Ambolley in an interview with said that the Vodafone Ghana Awards (VGMA) has vitiated the highlife music genre.
Countless journalists, including Daphne Caruana Galizia, had proven time and time again that the hospitals' deal was vitiated and “stank of corruption”.
Thus, the petitioner said, the selection and appointment of Sood as BFUHS vice-chancellor stands vitiated, and therefore is liable to be set aside and quashed.
Hafeez says the RSS has vitiated the atmosphere so much that the community is viewed with suspicion after any untoward incident.
His administration tried to dilute the Voting Rights Act, vitiated the bipartisan U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and vowed to abolish affirmative action, arguing that white men were the only victims — of reverse discrimination.
Justice Claudette Singh ‘vitiated’ this 1997 General and Regional Elections, putting Guyana into a new and extraordinary constitutional challenge.
The results were never vitiated as fraud since the court had ruled on the procedures used which means that according to the Commission’s records, those results are not fraudulent and would have to be replaced.
Because we have adduced so much evidence of guilt of this President, so much evidence of serious misconduct, any privilege the President would have would be vitiated by this crime-fraud exception.
Now, at that time, nobody could say politics had vitiated the narrative.
The Finance Minister has also called for a review of all the post-arbitration counterclaims so that it does not get vitiated and “we get a picture of where we are”.
Virtu is arguing that the selection of the Magro/Zammit Tabona joint venture was “vitiated” and decided upon “merits” which were outside the commercial sphere.
Eventually, in 2017, the Tamil Nadu government passed an ordinance to allow the conduct of the sport, but subsequent events were vitiated by deaths and accusations of ill-treatment of the animals.
All these improvements radiating from Juba, however, have been vitiated by the civil war, in which the roads have been extensively mined by the SPLA and the bridges destroyed, and because roads have not been maintained, they have seriously deteriorated.
However, if this consent is obtained by deception, this consent is vitiated.
Keynes believed that Boole had made a fundamental error in his definition of independence which vitiated much of his analysis.
The daily invasion of visitors, many of high social and political rank, vitiated the atmosphere with frivolous concerns and vain conversations.
While this tactic was vitiated by the development of smokeless propellant, the threat from more capable torpedo craft (later including submarines) remained.