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Meanings of deprive people in English
We have no meanings for "deprive people" in our records yet.
Usage of deprive people in English
1
In fact, to deprivepeople of Religion is to deprive them of nothing.
2
If you deprivepeople of that, you're depriving them of much more than mere entertainment.
3
I hate to deprivepeople of things they like.
4
But I'm on the ballot-youcan't deprivepeople of the chance of voting for me.
5
But to remain silent about the link is to deprivepeople of information that could save their lives.
6
He pointed out that society had agreed it is wrong to deprivepeople of their liberty for something they might do.
7
Rajapaksa, who is trying to make a political comeback, has publicly criticized the plan, saying it will deprivepeople of agricultural land.
8
That capitalism is not well entrenched is a blessing in no disguise: this crisis does not deprivepeople sufficiently to foster a revolution.
9
Why it's wrong to close her temples and deprivepeople of the faith that sustains them through this life and into the next.
10
And it would be a shame to deprivepeople of the opportunity for flattery that is offered by the word "Mademoiselle".
11
Their view, he says, "has no credibility" without them also espousing "resistance to militarism, the death penalty and conditions that deprivepeople of dignity".
12
The court said outlawing assisted suicide deprivespeople of dignity and autonomy.
13
Tells about experiments deprivingpeople of their dreams & similar work with cats.
14
This deprivespeople of helping one another and compounds the crisis.
15
Restitution can be done without deprivingpeople who already have property.
16
The combination of long distances, high costs and the conflict deprivedpeople of life-saving healthcare.