denatured

[ UK /dˈɛnət‍ʃəd/ ]
[ US /dɪˈneɪtʃɝd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. changed in nature or natural quality
    denatured alcohol
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How To Use denatured In A Sentence

  • This causes problems for the plant because if a broad band of proteins have been denatured, they can't continue with their normal metabolic cycles.
  • Papers tended to be reduced to the lowest common denominator, inoffensive to any service, even before they reached the chiefs themselves, where the necessity for unanimous agreement caused them to be denatured even further.
  • The drug of choice was "dehorn" - denatured alcohol. The Seattle Times
  • Curiously, the same logic also appears to be true of the tourist strip, which, in its own tacky way, is a classic example of how run-amok corporate money can leave a place wholly denatured.
  • I guess the tripe was what the cabbage was stuffed with; I don't know because everything was so denatured it had no flavour.
  • His colour gets disembodied or denatured in these pictures, but much of its life, as found in his early water colours, issues out in the spirited passages in line.
  • What you end up with is a tale told in broad strokes, akin to the kind of denatured film biographies the studios produced in the 1940s and 1950s. Marshall Fine: HuffPost Review: Amelia crashes
  • A number of cars derailed, including one that began leaking denatured alcohol.
  • This abuse of language mirrors the abuse which we make our existence: we have denatured it in removing from it any trace of the sacred, in our blind observance of the dictums of project and work.
  • A car on one of the trains is also leaking denatured alcohol, which of course, is extremely dangerous.
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