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Enfeebling   Listen
verb
Enfeeble  v. t.  (past & past part. enfeebled; pres. part. enfeebling)  To make feeble; to deprive of strength; to reduce the strength or force of; to weaken; to debilitate. "Enfeebled by scanty subsistence and excessive toil."
Synonyms: To weaken; debilitate; enervate.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Enfeebling" Quotes from Famous Books



... the death of Moses the same habit of enfeebling the majesty of the Biblical text to suit the current taste is manifested. Moses weeps before he ascends the mountain to die. He exhorts the people not to lament over his departure. As he is about to embrace Joshua and Eleazar, he is covered with a cloud ...
— Josephus • Norman Bentwich

... case that the artifices and refinements of our fashionable boarding-schools, have a most withering influence upon body, mind and soul, enfeebling and distorting the body, producing depraved stomachs, whimsical nerves, peevish tempers, indolent minds, and depraved morals. They become but wrecks of what they were when they first entered the school. This has been called "the stiff and ...
— The Christian Home • Samuel Philips

... or tha am, art, tu or thu thou, troimh or throimh through, tar or thar over, am beil or am bheil is there? dom or domh to me, &c. Has not this remission or suppression of the articulations the effect of enfeebling the speech, by mollifying its bones and relaxing its nerves? Ought not therefore the progress of this corruption to be opposed, by retaining unaspirated articulations in those instances where universal practice has not ...
— Elements of Gaelic Grammar • Alexander Stewart

... thank-offerings ought we to make to the kind and beneficent spirit that breathes in all things here below! Indeed, the care which nature takes to strip us piece by piece of our raiment, to unclothe the soul by enfeebling gradually our hearing, sight, and sense of touch, in making slower the circulation of our blood, and congealing our humors so as to make us as insensible to the approach of death as we were to the beginnings of life, this maternal care which she lavishes on our frail tabernacle of ...
— The Physiology of Marriage, Part III. • Honore de Balzac

... herself well-nigh to death in chasing the butterfly delusions of Fashion, seeing them fade in her hands as fast as she grasps them, starving her soul and dwarfing her mind in the pursuit of such phantoms, enfeebling her body, irritating her nerves, breaking down her constitution, fading in early womanhood, and dying ere her years are half lived; what object is more sorrowful and has higher claims upon our pity? We think it sad when a woman is thus crushed by neglect or abuse, ...
— Aims and Aids for Girls and Young Women • George Sumner Weaver


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