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debilitated

[ US /dəˈbɪɫəˌteɪtɪd/ ]
[ UK /dɪbˈɪlɪtˌe‍ɪtɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. lacking energy or vitality

How To Use debilitated In A Sentence

  • As such it is a common ingredient in tonic formulas, particularly for elderly or debilitated people.
  • Yet society will ascribe a very low quality of life to poor, debilitated people, despite the fact that they are sometimes the most content. THE STAPLE STREET GANG: MANDY AND THE PURPLE SPOTTED HANKY
  • This bacterium is usually confined to hospitals and in particular to vulnerable or debilitated patients.
  • No discrimination was observed; the robust young man, with an iron constitution, was, so far as related to food, placed on a par with the poor invalid, debilitated with protracted suffering or dying of inappetency. Jack in the Forecastle or, Incidents in the Early Life of Hawser Martingale
  • A gastrostomy tube can clearly improve nutritional status in a debilitated person with severe dysphagia, and may prolong life.
  • To have many planets debilitated in this way in a nativity is considered a sign of obscurity and low birth.
  • The troops were severely debilitated by hunger and disease.
  • Issues of fairness and equality aside, the country can't afford to have the president debilitated by the flu or the complications that can follow from it - especially when it is easily prevented.
  • This image, in turn, stood in stark opposition to that of the deformed, graceless, debilitated scoliotic girl and to that of the languid, listless, and useless conspicuous consumptive.
  • The film follows Pimentel as he gives up a safe corporate job to follow his dream and talent of public speaking, as well as his long friendship with a writer almost completely debilitated by cerebral palsy (Michael Sheen). Up All Night With Too Many Movies « Screaming Blue Reviews
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