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impoverish
[ im-pov-er-ish, -pov-rish ]
impoverish
/ ɪmˈpɒvərɪʃ /
verb
- to make poor or diminish the quality of
to impoverish society by cutting the grant to the arts
- to deprive (soil, etc) of fertility
Derived Forms
- imˈpoverisher, noun
- imˈpoverishment, noun
Other Words From
- im·pover·ish·er noun
- im·pover·ish·ment noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of impoverish1
Word History and Origins
Origin of impoverish1
Example Sentences
For two centuries, elites across the world have undermined Haitian sovereignty and impoverished its people.
If we lose the genetic diversity of native plants, we’re impoverishing our landscapes and making them less resilient.
These twin deficits enrich our frenemies and impoverish present and future Americans.
Rosner seemed to think such boycotts simply serve to impoverish our knowledge of these crucial issues.
Their basic claim is that if government spends more now, deficits will rise, and that will impoverish our grandchildren.
In short, deficits undertaken to finance productive investment not only do not impoverish our grandchildren, they enrich them.
Giving does not impoverish either her ample purse or her generous heart.
Father Castel was a madman, but a good man upon the whole; he was sorry to see me thus impoverish myself to no purpose.
Spanish policy had devised a still more ingenious contrivance gradually to impoverish the richest families of the land.
In the system we are discussing, to allow them to export crowns would be to allow them to impoverish themselves.
Sometimes nature appears to spend all her intellectual and moral wealth on the father, and almost to impoverish the sons.
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