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19 Sentences With "vitiates"

How to use vitiates in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "vitiates" and check conjugation/comparative form for "vitiates". Mastering all the usages of "vitiates" from sentence examples published by news publications.

In school, plagiarism is a serious offense because it vitiates the purposes of the assignment in the first place.
The system vitiates tax gaming, because income siphoned from Germany will just be taxed currently at 25 percent by the United States.
He must, therefore, believe he can genuinely help Trump defeat Hillary Clinton, and that achieving this singular goal vitiates all Trump's inexpiable sins.
In fact, the last thing North Korea wants is quiet and security, for it vitiates the necessity and legitimacy of the failed leadership.
One is in bondage either to one's own will, which inevitably vitiates one's actions, or to the divine will, which makes them truly good.
A slaveholder might have been offended by a slave's demand for freedom (and to be called by a respectful title), but that in no way vitiates the legitimacy of the claim. Ha!
While reasonableness and good judgment are essential components of enforcement, no one who enters any country illegally should presume that the passage of time vitiates compliance with or enforcement of immigration laws.
The California Employment Law Council seems only to have made an appearance as an amicus for AT&T Mobility, echoing Mayer Brown's argument that the en banc 9th Circuit should overturn the court's 2015 Sakkab precedent, which vitiates mandatory arbitration for employees.
O Vicedo seems to have its base in the Latin word "vitiates". Therefore, it can be translated as "the place where the 'vice' abounds". 'Vice' is an annual legume of the Papilionaceae subfamily that abounds in coastal zones all throughout Europe.
Appellant's second contention has merit, i.e. the failure to obtain an arrest warrant vitiates the arrest. As stated above, Inspector Barbarick had probable cause to arrest appellant on the 17th of August, 1972. However, the arrest was not made until six days later—on the 23rd of August.
The relevant clause in the bill reads: "Any person who vitiates the atmosphere in any place so as to make it noxious to the public to the health of persons in general dwelling or carrying on business in the neighbourhood or passing along a public way shall be guilty of a misdemeanour".
Chester v Afshar [2004] UKHL 41 is an important English tort law case regarding causation in a medical negligence context. The House of Lords decided that a doctor's failure to fully inform a patient of all surgery risks vitiates the need to show that harm would have been caused by the failure to inform.
Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, ed. "Bridging the Gap: Towards a Realist-Constructivist Dialogue" in International Studies Review vol. 6, 2004, pp. 337-352 Constructivists may fail to recognize that their focus on describing the emergence of shared norms not only vitiates the predictive value of their theory but also that it ignores the important role of deception in international relations.
The Review of Communication 9 no. 1 (January 2009): 1-5. Bitzer's objectivism is clear, and easily taught as a method, however errant it may be according to Vatz's construction, for rhetorical criticism. Vatz claims that portraying rhetoric as situationally based vitiates rhetoric as an important field; portraying rhetoric as the cause of what people see as pressing situations enhances the significance of rhetorical study.
In 2001, Huston Smith wrote in a letter to the editor of the Harvard Divinity School Bulletin that, "I doubt that any other book—not even those of early, polemical, poorly informed, and bigoted missionaries — has offended Hindu sensibilities so grossly. And understandably, despite Kripal's protestations to the contrary in Secret Talk: The Politics of Scholarship in Hindu Tantrism, Kali's Child is colonialism updated." In 2002, religious scholar Peter Heehs wrote that there is no direct evidence of homosexuality in the Kathamrta or "anywhere else", and Kripal himself admits that his interpretations are often "speculative". Heehs wrote that the "sensationalism" of Kripal's approach "vitiates the overall value of his book", which does "make a number of interesting points".
Kamanga defended the law, saying the traditional courts would operate only at the local level, with a jurisdiction limited to small matters. The Local Courts bill includes a clause that bans fouling the air: "Any person who vitiates the atmosphere in any place so as to make it noxious to the public to the health of persons in general dwelling or carrying on business in the neighbourhood or passing along a public way shall be guilty of a misdemeanour". Speaking on Capital Radio's Straight Talk program, Justice Minister Chaponda said that legislation bans farting in public places and makes it a criminal offense. The story was quickly picked up by the foreign press, particularly the British tabloids.
The three forms of the cantus are the cantus gestualis (the chanson de geste), the cantus coronatus, and the cantus versiculatus (also called versicularis or versualis). The distinction between the latter two classes is not clear from the work, both being illustrated by examples from the trouvères. The distinguishing features of each class are described vaguely and Grocheio's subsequent comparison of popular music with ecclesiastical vitiates many of the distinctions (Ars musicae, 130:112): > Cantus coronati are normally composed by kings and nobles and they are > frequently sung in the presence of kings and princes of the earth, in order > that their souls may be moved to be daring and resolute, magnanimous and > liberal, characteristics that all make for good rule. This kind of song is > made from delightful and lofty material, as, for instance, when it is about > friendship and charity, and is made entirely of perfect longas.
" Though he did say, "Their parents and older siblings may find the 89-minute running time quite long enough."Rise of the Guardians (PG) Retrieved February 17, 2013 Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter called the film "a lively but derivative 3D storybook spree for some unlikely action heroes." Conversely, Justin Chang in Variety said, "Even tots may emerge feeling slightly browbeaten by this colorful, strenuous and hyperactive fantasy, which has moments of charm and beauty but often resembles an exploding toy factory rather than a work of honest enchantment." Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal found that the film "lacks a resonant center," and that the script, "seems to have been written by committee, with members lobbying for each major character, and the action, set in vast environments all over the map, spreads itself so thin that a surfeit of motion vitiates emotion.
Since all parties concerned were under the impression that the stipulation had been entered in the record, the defendant-appellant cannot be allowed to benefit from a purely technical error, if in fact there was error. Appellant next contends that (A) the hearing on the motion to suppress failed to establish that the informant's reliability was sufficient to warrant use of his 'tip'; (B) he contends that the failure to obtain an arrest warrant vitiates the arrest and subsequent seizure; and (C) he contends that a consent to search cannot be acquired during an illegal detention and that his consent was not shown to be voluntary and knowledgeable. As to appellant's first contention, the Judge at the suppression hearing found that the informant's reliability had been established by the testimony of Inspector Barbarick and that the reliability standards of Aguilar v. Texas, 378 U.S. 108, 84 S.Ct. 1509, 12 L.Ed.2d 723, and Spinelli v. United States, 393 U.S. 410, 89 S.Ct. 584, 21 L.Ed.2d 637 had been met.

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