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.
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  • 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
  • But subsequently, the accomplice palliated the situation by offering a token gift of candy a Life Saver, by generating sympathy with justification for his earlier aggressive behavior, or by asking for help with a humorous task. The Bass Handbook of Leadership
  • Jaundice is palliated by stenting the stricture at the lower end of the common bile duct; this has superseded operative palliation.
  • Chosen carefully, the oils may not only palliate but also cure the condition.
  • With every growing line, I felt my confidence growing… It seemed that I could palliate my secret, almost erase the penury I had once lived in.
  • No such consideration palliated the treatment they received in the north.
  • It is not material to consider whether any steps or any further steps could have been taken to avoid or palliate the risk that the blood would be infected.
  • The drink stimulates the appetite and aids digestions, and the food palliates the ethylic effects of the drink.
  • He was never one to palliate or eulogise, he was never a regulation aesthete.
  • Far from being arbitrary, it seems to me that the Secretary of State has done all that he could be expected to do to palliate the deprivation of liberty of the many applicants for asylum here.
  • People's generosity and the ideology of reciprocity palliated the experiences of poverty, hard times, and corn shortages.
  • An act of gross desertion may, in any case, be palliated under the plea of intoxication; the murder of an officer may be as easily coloured over with that of temporary insanity. Chronicles of the Canongate
  • Tracheobronchial stents effectively restore airway patency in selected patients with large airway obstruction and palliate symptoms of fistulae in a relatively noninvasive fashion.
  • Up to his neck in the reputedly healing waters, Daudet read Montaigne; and in private consumed huge amounts of morphine, chloral and bromide in an attempt to palliate his excruciating pains.
  • The need to deny, palliate, or make up for the thinness of New World culture and to mount counter-claims of glory for New World scenery long shaped how America was viewed and portrayed.
  • It implies a change or a course of events that can be reversed, or whose consequences can at least be palliated or relativized.
  • Then reseating himself in his chair, he watched his looks and manner: anxiously, it is true, but with the open front of a gentleman who feels he has taken no part which he need excuse or palliate. The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club
  • He did not disguise it to himself, nor attempt to palliate it. Chapter 27
  • tried unsuccessfully to palliate the widespread discontent.
  • I think that first item could have prevented a lot of the problem and palliated its consequences even if effectively implemented in 2003 instead of 1995. What If, Arnold Kling | EconLog | Library of Economics and Liberty
  • One recommends this Cazaio rather to the spinners of romance: with his morality -- a trifle buccaneerish on occasion -- once discreetly palliated, history affords few heroes more instantly taking to the fancy .... Gallantry Dizain des Fetes Galantes
  • The subject requires explicitness, Captain Anderson: and I am not ac-customed to palliate, whenever it does. Sir Charles Grandison
  • With mid-term elections on the horizon and the influence of former president Lula sidetracked by treatment to palliate his larengyal cancer, Brazil's latest political carnival could find William Waack at the front of the parade. Eric Ehrmann: Brazil Springs A WikiLeak... Assange Tags Newsman As Media Mole
  • It's a hard trail, Liverpool, and only the men that are hard will get through," Charles strove to palliate. LIKE ARGUS OF THE ANCIENT TIMES
  • De Guingand's role as a foil to Montgomery was a vital one and his diplomacy and tact helped palliate Montgomery's abrasiveness.
  • Both are exceedingly gifted individuals with enviable human qualities; both were once cherished friends to me; and both, I think, use rage and spite to palliate their unhealed wounds. Archive 2009-12-01
  • His touches are average dark ambient and he palliates what could otherwise be the sound of dread and belligerence.
  • There were 213 patients after exclusion of the 58 patients who were palliated, followed up for less than 24 months or lost to follow-up.
  • Chosen carefully, the oils may not only palliate but also cure the condition.
  • One must see people undressed to judge truly of their shape; when they are dressed to go abroad, their clothes are contrived to conceal, or at least palliate the defects of it: as full-bottomed wigs were contrived for the Duke of Burgundy, to conceal his hump back. Letters to his son on The Art of Becoming a Man of the World and a Gentleman
  • Where recurrent disease is responsible for blockage of lymphatic collaterals, chemotherapy may be tried to palliate the symptomatology.
  • There are those tales too of a somewhat grimmer nature concerning the use of humour to palliate the horrors of war.
  • Daudet consumed huge amounts of morphine, chloral and bromide in an attempt to palliate his excruciating pains.
  • But it wasn't until 1983 that the first successful operation to palliate the anomalies was reported by Norwood.
  • People the world over, who are interested in non-violence, should unite to establish a non-violent defence to palliate the misery of people in different parts of the country, says Dr. Alberto.
  • Symptoms such as hemoptysis, dyspnea, and chest pain often can be effectively palliated by external beam radiation.
  • Better to bring the cyst of Islamofascism/terrorism/whatever to the surface through provocation where it can be lanced, no matter how painful that may be in the short term, than to palliate its symptoms through appeasement while letting it fester beneath the surface (with many things like not-torturing-people being appeasement). Matthew Yglesias » Torture and Stick-Beating
  • The Higden debt, both for the rent and the stores, was the only one at which she did not blush, since, great as was her indiscretion, in not enquiring into her powers before she plighted her services, it would be palliated by her motive. Camilla
  • With laughs he palliates the sense of doom that is the heritage of the Irish Catholic.
  • The Democrats will by and large continue to cater to those interests and palliate the rest of us with rhetoric.
  • The creeping fractures in both have been palliated by results in recent games, but the coming ones will determine whether those signs of life are indicative of temporary remission or permanent recovery.
  • The neostigmine Seever had sent for seemed to palliate the weakness, which had not been experienced for some time, and the nausea attacks also seemed to have vanished. Through The Eye Of A Needle
  • Second we will be adding a soothing side of a Velcro to a behind side of a shade, as good as third good palliate in a generosity a bit for a shade to fit upon a batten. Screwdriver Cordless YouTube Bosch GSR 10.8 V-LI Cordless ...
  • Using immuno-histochemistry or in situ hybridization, i.e. analytical methods that palliate kidney heterogeneity, authors reported increased expression of putative markers in several kidney pathologies PLoS ONE Alerts: New Articles
  • Surgery and chemotherapy may palliate pain caused by tumor growth and encroachment on normal structures.
  • By the marked reduction in the -- Brachiopods compared with the now richly developed Gasteropods and -- and sinupalliate -- Lamellibranchs," -- it writhed and twisted before his dizzy eyes. Little Eve Edgarton
  • JC: I could have sworn I must have fielded this a thousand times: because I could not find a worthy opponent in this over-palliated world! Excerpt from Urdoxa 2.0
  • Up to his neck in the reputedly healing waters, Daudet read Montaigne; and in private consumed huge amounts of morphine, chloral and bromide in an attempt to palliate his excruciating pains.
  • Patients with palliated heart disease, including all single ventricle patients Flu
  • As such, it could be exterminated but not palliated. Great Transition~ History of the Future
  • These women were able to palliate ethnic and class differences by integrating recent European immigrants and native-born women into a single community with a coherent spirituality.
  • Then he reassured himself: women tended to be palliated by his abundant affection when his prowess faltered, rather frequently these days.
  • Lung transplantation has become an acceptable therapy to palliate patients with a variety of end-stage lung diseases.
  • The word palliate comes from the Latin palliare, “to cloak”—and providing pain relief was perceived as cloaking the essence of the illness, smothering symptoms rather than attacking disease. The Emperor of All Maladies
  • As a fanatical fight for purity and against any form of assimilation, it cannot be palliated. Great Transition~ Where Are We
  • Frustration was palliated by a perception that the region was far more complex than the uninitiated suspected, and that to understand its dynamics one had to be an expert.

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