Worn away as by water or ice or wind.
1The result is that the right to freedom of speech is eroded.
2However, survivors' scores eroded as they reported more and more chronic conditions.
3Rampant corruption has eroded the credibility of Afghan President Hamid Karzai's government.
4In commodity markets, oil prices slid as the pandemic eroded global demand.
5The changes have eroded earnings and hurt share prices across the industry.
6Public confidence and public perception that the courts are non-partisan has eroded.
7While the regime enjoys some support, its propaganda has eroded its credibility.
8To his left and right are pillars whose ankles have been eroded.
9Assets at small- and medium-sized banks tripled since 2006 while solvency eroded.
10Accounting and insider trading scandals have further eroded faith in the market.
11Regulatory inconsistences and miscalculations have further eroded public faith in the system.
12The automaker's share of the U.S. market has eroded steadily for decades.
13This road was smaller, its surface badly eroded by time and weather.
14Even though every fourth Spaniard is unemployed, job protection is being eroded.
15Over the past couple of years this policy has gradually been eroded.
16But that strategy backfired as profit margins eroded and customer losses persisted.
Sobre este termo
eroded
erode Verbo
Indicativo · Pretérito perfeito
Eroded nas variantes da língua
Estados Unidos da América