obviated in English

verb
1
remove (a need or difficulty).
the Venetian blinds obviated the need for curtains

Use "obviated" in a sentence

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

1. Disaster was obviated by the opening of the reserve parachute.

2. 4 Disaster was obviated by the opening of the reserve parachute.

3. 14 That violence was unacceptable obviated the need to search for a sufficient cause.

4. 9 And surely enough, the difficulties he had been experiencing with reality were in time obviated.

5. This obviated the problem of building team spirit or involvement among the area staff.

6. 13 The newly established Legations protested and the introduction of the fast-growing eucalyptus obviated the necessity.

7. 15 They rolled up and down perfectly and their presence obviated the need for curtains.

8. The interference due to the presence of nitric acid is obviated by fuming with hydrochloric acid.

9. The conductors may be aligned with the active matrix and the requirement for calibration may be obviated.

10. 7 The settlement, which concluded four months of negotiations, obviated the need for the separate cases to be heard in court.

11. In an arena of cultural proprietorship that is closely guarded by a Brahmanistic world circle of Indian classical carnatic music, Patrick Ngcobo obviated old world hegemonies

12. As the solid acid can easily be removed through filtering or centrifugation after a reaction, the conventional complicated salt-removing process is obviated by the present invention.

13. Unfortunately another important aspect of the 'ideal', the exploration of which would have obviated critical charges of stating the obvious, is also largely missing from this exhibition: the debt that Turner owed to Claude's Associationism.Many of Claude's pictures contain allusions or they respect associative processes such as 'decorum', which in the case of landscape and marine painting