adulterating

[ UK /ɐdˈʌltəɹˌe‍ɪtɪŋ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. making impure or corrupt by adding extraneous materials
    the adulterating effect of extraneous materials
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How To Use adulterating In A Sentence

  • Election year politics have a way of adulterating the more important issues facing the country, even those issues that would seem to transcend the ideological divide. Frank Stewart: Natural Gas' Role in 2012 Election Cycle
  • When customers' dissatisfaction devolves into personal attacks, adulterating food or drink is a convenient way for servers to exact covert vengeance. Waiters can and do spit in people's food.
  • The authorities, especially, the health department, should take stringent action against those who are adulterating food.
  • The Chinese are in the habit of adulterating some of their tea for the market, but they are honest enough to call it in their language _lie tea_. The Life of Duty, v. 2 A year's plain sermons on the Gospels or Epistles
  • The contaminated chilli powder has been imported from India, where certain producers have been adulterating their product with the red dye.
  • Pot smokers short on time can use a variety of methods to avoid testing positive, such as diluting their urine by drinking a lot of water, substituting someone else's urine, or adulterating their sample with masking agents.
  • Arghel_ are used for adulterating senna, _Cassia obovata_ or _C. senna_, also a native of Egypt, cultivated in the East Indies, as well as in Spain, Italy, and Jamaica. The Commercial Products of the Vegetable Kingdom Considered in Their Various Uses to Man and in Their Relation to the Arts and Manufactures; Forming a Practical Treatise & Handbook of Reference for the Colonist, Manufacturer, Merchant, and Consumer, o
  • BISO Non-Contract adulterating is specially used for additional agent of non-contract concrete or mortar.
  • On returning to his native land, he still continued to turn his chemical knowledge to account, by giving his services to that particular branch of our commercial industry which is commonly described as the adulteration of commodities; and from this he had gradually risen to the more refined pursuit of adulterating gold and silver -- or, to use the common phrase again, making bad money. A Rogue's Life
  • The law enforcement officer closes to pay to the all of the adulterating of hunt down and seize mattress undertakes.
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