We have no meanings for "vitiate by" in our records yet.
1 The work is vitiated by an almost virulent antipathy toward the South.
2 And that is what it is-vitiatedby the life a bachelor leads.
3 All these analogies are vitiated by radical unlikeness between the things compared.
4 But your sociologic judgments are vitiated by your lack of practical knowledge.
5 It is not often that Horace's poetry is vitiated by bad taste.
6 An act vitiated by defect of mind is saved by Faith.
7 But it is vitiated by the corruption of fallen flesh.
8 His atmosphere was sadly deficient in life-giving oxygen, and much vitiated by gunpowder smoke.
9 But his theological taste was sadly vitiated by his study of the pagan philosophy.
10 His power to deliver a message was vitiated by this utter absence of receptivity.
11 Air may be vitiated by poisonous gases, by dust and smoke, or by germs.
12 These are very liable to be vitiated by bad observation, collusion and other causes.
13 More than this, the prediction of Christ's second advent is vitiated by this assumption.
14 Even to-day some good has come, but this is largely vitiated by other influences.
15 Their calculations had been vitiated by one fatal blunder.
16 But this is vitiated by a desire for recognition, a definite, almost a confessed, ambition.
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