perpetuated in English

verb
1
make (something, typically an undesirable situation or an unfounded belief) continue indefinitely.
the law perpetuated the interests of the ruling class

Use "perpetuated" in a sentence

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

1. Popular culture has perpetuated many myths about Agoraphobia.

2. This image is a myth perpetuated by the media.

3. Biphobia within the community is even perpetuated in the media.

4. The Adelaide leak, he said, was perpetuated by Don Bradman.

5. 27 Modern-day religions have perpetuated many of ancient Babylon’s doctrines.

6. Like the mass media, popular prints perpetuated escapist, conservative and conformist ideals and outlooks.

7. When the Barking produces the desired result, the “language” is reinforced and perpetuated.

8. Crabgrasses are annuals or perennials perpetuated by seeds that overwinter in the ground

9. A commonly perpetuated myth is that Carpeting has a negative impact on air quality

10. A Bondman's obligations ceased with death, and could not be perpetuated down to his descendants

11. The myth of a woman taking the blame to protect the male foible should not be perpetuated.

12. In Zambia, for example, complicated procedural requirements, in addition to inadequate services, have perpetuated reliance on illegal abortion

13. There is an inherent laziness that is also prevalent about Coloured identity and perpetuated by Coloured people ourselves

14. Neither is viable without the other and both require careful management to ensure that their viability is perpetuated.

15. This is perpetuated in modern weaning during the oral stage and finds an equivalent in manic-depressive and paranoid-schizophrenic disorders.

16. This perception of Barbadians of colour upholding the status quo — despite the social and economic inequalities perpetuated by systemic racism …

17. These arrangements entrenched a distinctive land-owning pattern among the peasantry and perpetuated the peasantry's distance from other social estates.

18. The ideals of harmonious and sustainable societies do not come out of perpetuated foolishness and Animosities if the leaders knew what happened during the previous Two WW

19. This core group formed a standard for larger units, gathering adherents by employing Amalgamative metaphors such as kinship and aboriginal commonality and claiming that they perpetuated an ancient, …

20. “Melania has perpetuated a myth that she never hired a nanny when Barron was young and that she waited to start her businesses until he went to school,” Wolkoff writes.

21. The gift was so apparently an offering of love he could not verbalize that I would throw my arms around him and kiss him--an act that undoubtedly perpetuated his behavior.

22. Trapped in an artificially perpetuated state of total war the industrial age nations of Bulchin vie with one another ceaselessly, bolstered by clandestine shipments of new arms and armor from the Munitorum eager to analyze

23. Equally exceptional is the one solitary case of the talmudist Simeon ben *Azzai who explained his Celibacy with the words: "My soul is fond of the Law; the world will be perpetuated by others" (Yev

24. The confidence Bestowed by his patron boosted his self-assurance and perpetuated his interest in becoming a professional sculptor.: This had been the first benefice Bestowed on Becket by Archbishop Theobald.: It was the greatest honour that could be

25. This is the wall, the border wall, that separates San Diego and Tijuana, Latin America and the United States, a physical emblem of exclusionary planning policies that have perpetuated the division of communities, jurisdictions and resources across the world.

26. Although the huge-scale oratorio tradition was perpetuated by such large ensembles as the Royal Choral Society, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir and the Huddersfield Choral Society in the 20th century, there were increasing calls for performances more faithful to Handel's conception.

27. Burl Barer along with Kenny Eurrell, one of the officers involved, paint a complete picture that illustrates how easy it was for the officers to get away with their crimes for so long, how the upper echelons of NYPD turned blind eyes and then when confronted made minor efforts, and the broken system that perpetuated the cycle.

28. Other writers have derived the word from the Arabic particle al (the definite article), and gerber, meaning "man." Since, however, Geber happened to be the name of a celebrated Moorish philosopher who flourished in about the 11th or 12th century, it has been supposed that he was the founder of Algebra, which has since perpetuated his name.

29. Employing an Aphoristic, almost Nietzschean, style of prose, Charlton issues a jeremiad against "political correctness," which he identifies as a product of the left (whether socialists, communists, liberals, etc.) but as also currently infecting the center and the right, perpetuated by the mass media and an intellectual elite and representing a "triumph of the left" that threatens to unravel modernity itself.

30. Mr. Erwa (Sudan) (spoke in Arabic): I am honoured to present to Mr. Papa Louis Fall, Chairman of the Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People, and to the members of the Committee our sincere thanks for their efforts to preserve the rights of the Palestinians and to expose the spuriousness of Israel's occupation and abhorrent practices, which have perpetuated the suffering of the Palestinian people