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- PERPETUATE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of PERPETUATE is to make perpetual or cause to last indefinitely How to use perpetuate in a sentence
- PERPETUATED Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
Perpetuated definition: constantly circulated or repeated, practiced, carried on, etc See examples of PERPETUATED used in a sentence
- PERPETUATE definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary
If someone or something perpetuates a situation, system, or belief, especially a bad one, they cause it to continue We must not perpetuate the religious divisions of the past [VERB noun] This image is a myth perpetuated by the media [VERB-ed]
- PERPETUATED | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
PERPETUATED definition: 1 past simple and past participle of perpetuate 2 to cause something to continue: Learn more
- Perpetuate - Definition, Meaning Synonyms | Vocabulary. com
Although they differ in spelling by only one letter, they differ greatly in meaning If you perpetuate something, you help it last Perpetrate, on the other hand, means to commit a criminal act Needless to say, you wouldn't want to perpetuate the acts of perpetrators! "Perpetuate "
- perpetuate verb - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
Definition of perpetuate verb from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary to make something such as a bad situation, a belief, etc continue for a long time Comics tend to perpetuate the myth that ‘boys don't cry’ perpetuate itself This system perpetuated itself for several centuries
- Perpetuate - definition of perpetuate by The Free Dictionary
To cause to continue indefinitely; make perpetual 2 To prolong the existence of; cause to be remembered: The new library will perpetuate its founder's great love of learning [Latin perpetuāre, perpetuāt-, from perpetuus, continuous; see perpetual ] per·pet′u·ance, per·pet′u·a′tion n per·pet′u·a′tor n
- PERPETUATE Definition Meaning | Dictionary. com
perpetuated, perpetuating to enable or allow the continuation of into the future; keep alive (used most often in reference to something considered harmful or false): Vines obscured a plaque intended to perpetuate her memory
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