Use "deaden" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "deaden" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "deaden", or refer to the context using the word "deaden" in the English Dictionary.

1. This drug deaden the pain.

2. Her feet were deaden with cold.

3. So little was needed to deaden her.

4. Terror blunted her feelings; deaden a sound.

5. This drug will deaden the pain.

6. Two of these pills will deaden the ache.

7. He drank alcohol to deaden the pain.

8. Does God care about moral and spiritual Cleanness? “Deaden

9. The tender committee have not set bidding deaden yet.

10. 22 To deaden, as to feelings or moral scruples; callous.

11. I'll give you a shot to deaden the pain first.

12. If he couldn't lose the feeling, perhaps he could deaden it.

13. To deaden, as to feelings or moral scruples; callous.

14. I think you need a shot to deaden the pain first.

15. Synonyms for Analgize include narcotize, dope, stupefy, sedate, poison, deaden, treat, dose, numb and anaesthetize

16. Butazolidin is a phenylbutazone preparation that is used to deaden pain and reduce inflammation.

17. The word “deaden” indicates that we must take strong measures to fight against immoral fleshly desires.

18. They managed to deaden the sound on TV every time the alleged victim's name was spoken.

19. The ability to produce or use original and unusual ideas: Too many rules might deaden Creativity

20. I had shut my eyes(Sentencedict.com), I confused myself on purpose to deaden the pain.

21. Alcohol serves to deaden feelings which the individual can not manage, or wishes to avoid.

22. In 1530 it meant to paralyze, deaden, stupefy, to stun or deprive of sensation, as by a blow.

23. ECOCELL Batts control and deaden sound due to the density of the cellulose fibers and the non-woven manufacturing process

24. Emma Goldman: I think voting is the opium of the masses in this country. Every four years you deaden the pain.

25. 20 Many persons try to block out loneliness with illicit sex, or to drown it with alcohol or to deaden it by compulsive eating.

26. “God wants to awaken our deaden[ed] and indifferent conscience,” declared a Catholic priest when 79 people died in a stampede in Manila, Philippines.

27. A terrified old woman fixed a mattress in front of her window on two clothes-poles for drying linen, in order to deaden the effect of musketry.

28. God’s Word admonishes: “Deaden, therefore, your body members that are upon the earth as respects fornication, uncleanness, sexual appetite, hurtful desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry.

29. The development of Anesthesiology as a specialized field came about because of the dangers of anesthesia, which involves the use of carefully graduated doses of strong poisons to deaden

30. Cryotherapy is a pain treatment that uses a method of localized freezing temperatures to deaden an irritated nerve.; Cryotherapy is also used as a method of treating localized areas of some cancers (called cryosurgery), such as prostate cancer and to treat abnormal skin cells by dermatologists

31. (Romans 12:9) We can actually feel the way Jehovah feels about sexual immorality by meditating on key Bible texts, such as Colossians 3:5, which urges: “Deaden, therefore, your body members that are upon the earth as respects fornication, uncleanness, sexual appetite, hurtful desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry.”

32. Cauterize: 1 v burn, sear, or freeze (tissue) using a hot iron or electric current or a caustic agent “The surgeon Cauterized the wart” Synonyms: burn , cauterise Type of: care for , treat provide treatment for v make insensitive or callous; deaden feelings or morals Synonyms: callous , cauterise Type of: harden , indurate , inure cause to

33. Amortize (v.) late 14c., from Old French amortiss-, present participle stem of amortir "deaden, kill, destroy; give up by right" (12c.), from Vulgar Latin *admortire "to extinguish," from ad "to" (see ad-) + mortus "dead," from Latin mors "death," from PIE root *mer-"to rub away, harm" (also "to die" and forming words referring to death and to beings subject to death).