VERB
  1. provide physical relief, as from pain
    This pill will relieve your headaches
  2. lessen or to try to lessen the seriousness or extent of
    The circumstances extenuate the crime
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How To Use palliate In A Sentence

  • External compression of airways can be palliated with stent insertion.
  • Selecting a period of bad weather to palliate allied air superiority, the Germans attacked on 16 December 1944.
  • In those pre- and early historical times people frequented such places often in the belief that imbibing the fresh water from a rocky pool, a woodland grove or a hollow in a grassland clearing cured or palliated certain illnesses.
  • I don't wish to palliate them, I assure you.
  • Acupuncture controls chemotherapy-related nausea and vomiting, and can palliate chronic pain.
  • That being said, the monthly paperback column does palliate this a bit. Catherine McKenzie: Ron Charles Talks Totally Hip Book Reviews and More
  • In the end, however, he palliates the differences, leaving the possibility for some way to harmonize the two.
  • A fire-breathing New York City minister denounced the absence of God in the preamble as ‘an omission which no pretext whatever can palliate.’
  • This interpretation will justify or palliate the exordial dialogue. Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies
  • This dreadful shake might have been palliated, at least, if not spared, by the lessons of fortitude that noble woman would have inculcated in her young and ductile mind. Camilla
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