How To Use Enervated In A Sentence

  • It felt like chewing string dipped in weed killer, but within a couple of minutes the trembling in his limbs gave way to a kind of enervated thrumming and the pounding in his head subsided to a manageable level. Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine
  • His enemies were enervated and lacked a strong voice.
  • The hot sun enervated her to the point of collapse.
  • Christianity because he feared that it might otherwise lapse into a kind of enervated allegory. Latest Articles
  • Aristophanes essayed the task both by criticism and example -- by criticism, directing the shafts of his ridicule at over-emphasis and over-subtlety, by example, writing himself in inimitable perfection the beautiful Attic dialect, which was being enervated and effeminated and spoiled in the hands of his opponents. The Eleven Comedies, Volume 1
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  • The hot sun enervated her to the point of collapse.
  • David felt too enervated to resist.
  • Furthermore, lung denervated lung transplant patients, unlike intact subjects, showed much difficulty in entraining their spontaneous rhythm to the mechanical ventilator during sleep.
  • Feeling at once enervated and threatened, the enterprise collectively hunkers into a defensive, self-protective posture.
  • Unlike the response of the denervated muscle to acetylcholine, this quick response of normal mammalian muscle is suppressed with great ease by curarine. Sir Henry Dale - Nobel Lecture
  • Remember the estimate of 10,000 jobs -- the one that "enervated" Sen. Charles Schumer? No Land Grab
  • The hot sun enervated her to the point of collapse.
  • We were paying the penalty of success, and the day was quite early wearing an enervated, faded, stale-end sort of air. THE DISPOSAL OF THE LIVING
  • Complications of this congenital abnormality range from paralysis, hydrocephalus, scoliosis, contractures, and joint dislocation to potential skin erosion of sensory denervated areas.
  • But whether depressed by the small audience or enervated by the heat, the choir made little impact before the interval.
  • She was enervated by the luxury of palace life.
  • At that terrible injunction, “Go and conquer,” America was desolated and its inhabitants exterminated; Africa and Europe were exhausted in vain to repeople it; the poison of money and of pleasure having enervated the species, the world became nearly a desert and appeared likely every day to advance nearer to desolation by the continual wars which were kindled on our continent, from the ambition of extending its power to foreign lands. A Philosophical Dictionary
  • But after a few months of feeling enervated I realized that contrary to all my expectations I was happy. ULTIMATE PRIZES
  • As secular identity becomes enervated, incoherent, and perplexed, as we grow tired and unstrung by self-doubt, hating them offers odd comfort.
  • Without this, poetry is enervated and becomes merely the record of consciousness no more compelling than yesterday's sports statistics.
  • You leave the theatre drained and enervated, wishing you could get that time back, 15 minutes of awesome explosions notwithstanding.
  • Hemingway's genius would be squandered, enervated by celebrity, and he would die an alcoholic and a suicide.
  • There were some in the Corinthian Church who had become thus enervated and forceless, and the Apostle seeks to stir them up into a more vigorous life. Things That Matter Most: Devotional Papers
  • Meanwhile, out-of-doors, you could hear the stamping and roaring of the crowd, goaded into a frenzy by repeated hymns, enfevered by its earnest desire for the Divine interposition, and growing more and more enervated by the delay. The Three Cities Trilogy: Lourdes, Volume 2
  • Next door and across the piazza is the 1983 museum, the last work of an enervated Stone, co-architect of the original 1939 Museum of Modern Art in New York. Easily Accessible Pleasures
  • In short, our forty-fourth chief executive sought to end America's two-and-a-third centuries as a truly exceptional nation-more patriotic, more dynamic, more enterprising and freer than any other-to turn the republic into a kind of enervated satellite of Western Europe. Forbes.com: News
  • Businessmen, enervated by the pressures of city life, sought spiritual as well as physical refreshment in the new pastime of bushwalking.
  • When I conjure in my mind the objections that people I know make to Christianity, I am reminded of my friend on the couch, enervated by life's manifold demands.
  • The day's ride had exhausted her already dwindled energy, and the night had truly enervated her.
  • He rejuvenates and remoulds spiritually enervated souls and purifies their intellects by imparting unvitiated Gita knowledge to them.
  • Fact is, his grogginess is of a piece with his intensely absurd comedy, the enervated mutterings of one worn out by too much hard thinking.
  • The tension has enervated whole generations of players.
  • The lack of food enervated him and he couldn't produce the goods when they were required.
  • When this is well executed, it is punchy and attention-grabbing; done badly, it is flat and enervated.
  • Diagnosis of the condition can be difficult because transplant recipients have denervated hearts and rarely present with chest pain.
  • The widespread collapse into an enervated self can not be attributed solely to the economic and social problems of our day.
  • Nor does the former mayor address the secondary point that the putatively omnipotent USSR 17 years later lost the Cold War to the apparently "enervated" USA. Stephen Schlesinger: Giuliani: Worse Than Bush
  • The stories are collectively a portrait of a certain kind of enervated sophistication that even the enervated sophisticates yearn to see upended. The Munro Doctrine of Humor
  • If he is right to challenge Herodotus on the colloquial "the wind grew fagged" or the inadequate "unpleasant end," the same bathos can be achieved by straying too far in the opposite direction, to "the wind grew enervated" or "calamitous termination," say. On the Sublime
  • Her expression, restless and dissatisfied, her attitude, weary and enervated, gave the idea of the title admirably, and I made a good sketch. Five Nights
  • It enervated Sven, draining his energy and willpower, then paralyzing him.
  • The hot sun enervated her to the point of collapse.
  • Always ‘in character’ as the self-appointed roué, Jerome's encounters with women are strangely enervated events.
  • This syndrome also illustrates the capacity of motor nerves to recover and to reinnervate the denervated face muscles.
  • His enervated foster parents solved the problem by giving the little rowdy into the custody of a cloister.

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